The Colfax Bazaar Is Back on March 21st!
How a 113-Year-Old Building, a Scrappy Nonprofit, and an SFGate Feature Just Changed the Game for Downtown Colfax
Some partnerships just make sense.
The Historic Fruit Exchange Building has been standing on Main Street since 1910. It was built at the peak of Colfax’s agricultural boom — when Sierra foothill orchards were producing thousands of crates of apples, pears, and peaches every year, and the Southern Pacific Railroad was shipping them to San Francisco and Sacramento markets. Growers, packers, and railroad workers moved through these doors daily. This building wasn’t on the sidelines of Colfax history. It was the center of it.
Then the industry shifted. Refrigeration changed everything. The Central Valley took over distribution. The orchards went quiet. The building that once buzzed with commerce sat largely dormant — while thousands of cars rolled past it every day on I-80 without knowing what they were passing.
That last part is changing.
It started with a conversation. Building owner Todd Saylor had a vision for an event — something that would give people a reason to get off the highway and walk through those historic doors again. He brought that idea to the Historic Colfax Downtown Association. Together, we built it from the ground up.
On Saturday, March 21st, that partnership throws open the doors again for the next installment of The Colfax Bazaar. It’s a vintage and artisan market, a community gathering, and a statement all at once. A statement that says: Colfax is a destination now.
SFGate agrees.
When SFGate Comes Calling
On February 4th, SFGate published a feature on Colfax: “Priced out of Tahoe, young transplants are turning to this foothills town.” By February 5th, our phones were ringing.
Here’s what matters most to us: they mentioned The Colfax Bazaar by name.
SFGate described our Bazaar as “a vibrant marketplace filled with antiques, oddities, handcrafted goods, and local flavor.”
Not a small-town footnote. Not a passing mention. A feature in one of the Bay Area’s most widely-read regional publications describing something we built from scratch — in a town of 2,200 people, inside a 113-year-old building — as vibrant.
This is what happens when you do the work.
The SFGate piece wasn’t really about us. It was about the people who make Colfax what it is. They talked to Eva Saunders, born and raised here, who works at Il Pizzaiolo and TJ’s Roadhouse — two of the local businesses we’re proud to call neighbors on Main Street. She told the reporter something every one of us already knows: “You drive two hours and you’re at the beach. Drive an hour and you’re at Tahoe.”
They interviewed transplants who chose Colfax deliberately. People who wanted more trees than people. Who appreciated that there’s not a single stoplight in town. Neighbors who told the reporter: “Everybody’s just mellow and sweet. And everyone waves to each other.”
That’s the Colfax we’re fighting for. That’s the story SFGate found when they came here — because partnerships like ours with Todd Saylor and the Fruit Exchange gave them something to find.
A Building Built for Commerce. Built for Community.
To understand why this partnership matters to us, you have to understand what the Fruit Exchange Building actually is.
Colfax’s agricultural story didn’t start with the building. It started in 1850, when pioneer Enos Mendenhall planted one of the first fruit orchards in the region. The Sierra Foothills’ elevation, mild summers, and rich soil turned out to be ideal for apples, pears, peaches, and grapes. While Gold Rush miners were chasing metal in the canyons below, farmers were quietly discovering that the land itself was the real treasure.
By the late 1800s, orchards were flourishing across the foothills. The Colfax Fruit Growers Association formed to help farmers organize, inspect, pack, and ship their harvests. The completion of the Transcontinental Railroad had already transformed Colfax from a stopover town into a strategic shipping hub. By the 1920s, Colfax was exporting thousands of crates of fruit every year, bound for markets across California.
The Fruit Exchange Building was the nerve center of all of it. Growers brought their harvests here. Packers prepared them for shipment. The Southern Pacific line, just steps away, carried them west. In 1926, Colfax became one of only 23 icing locations in the Pacific Fruit Express network — a massive operation that kept refrigerated railcars cold with blocks of ice cut from the Sierra snowpack.
Then, as it does, time moved on. Mechanical refrigeration made the icing platforms obsolete. Larger Central Valley operations took over distribution. The orchards sold off or went fallow. The building went quiet.
For decades it stood — architecturally intact, historically significant, and largely invisible to the tens of thousands of travelers passing it on I-80 every single day.
This is exactly the kind of story we were created to tell. And exactly the kind of space we were created to bring back to life.

What This Partnership Means for Our Community
The Historic Colfax Downtown Association was founded on the belief that our town — with its rich, layered history involving Nisenan Maidu people, Gold Rush miners, Chinese railroad laborers, and agricultural pioneers who fed a state — deserves to be known for more than its off-ramp.
The Bazaar is our proof of concept. Our previous events drew 400 to 500 visitors to downtown Colfax. Local businesses reported doubled and tripled sales on event days. The social media post about the SFGate coverage exploded — people shared it, planned visits, and some started asking about neighborhoods and schools. About making Colfax home.
When we activate a historic building, we don’t just fill it with vendors for a day. We remind our community of what it’s capable of. We give visitors a reason to stop. We start writing the next chapter of a story that’s been paused for too long.
That’s what we’re doing here. One conversation, one partnership, one event at a time.
Who’s Coming to the Hunt
This month’s Bazaar features one of the most eclectic vendor lineups we’ve ever assembled. These aren’t franchise booths or big-box overflow. These are makers, collectors, and creatives from across the region who chose Colfax — and we’re proud to have every single one of them.
You’ll find:
- Handmade wood items, kitchen gadgets, decorative bowls and vases
- Handcrafted jewelry made from vintage knitting needles
- Metal yard art: upcycled tank bells, valve flowers, and figurines
- Vintage and antique clothing, leather bags, shoes, and textiles
- Acrylic paintings, mixed media art, and large canvas works
- Unique mini crystal fairy gardens and one-of-a-kind character garden kits
- Hand-illustrated nature-inspired stationery, prints, totes, and drinkware
- Chainsaw carvings and wood-crafted items
- Woodturner items: bowls, spin tops, vases, and platters
- Custom drinkware, home décor, and farmhouse seasonal finds
- Vintage collectibles, antiques, MCM finds, and barn-fresh treasures
- Mountain and floral handcrafted wood art made from Sierra wildfire-reclaimed wood
- Handmade flower arrangements, wreaths, and greeting cards
- Antique furniture, vintage artwork, and the wonderfully weird — oddities and curiosities that defy description
- And much more — from apothecary herb starts to upcycled denim art
Every single one of these vendors chose to come here. To set up on our Historic Colfax District, beneath the eaves of a building that once shipped fruit to half of California, in a town that SFGate just told the Bay Area is worth the drive. We think they made a great choice.
Mark Your Map
WHERE: Historic Fruit Exchange Building, Downtown Colfax, CA (229 Railroad Street, Colfax)
WHEN: Saturday, March 21st, 2026 | 8AM – 3PM
EARLY BIRD: 7AM entry for just $5 — get first pick before the crowds
GENERAL ADMISSION: Always
FREE LIVE MUSIC: Local performers all day long
FOOD: Local food vendors on-site
RSVP & FREE TICKET: www.TheColfaxBazaar.com
AS FEATURED IN: SFGate, February 2026

Come for the deals. Stay for the stories.
The Colfax Bazaar isn’t just a market. It’s a 113-year-old building that once shipped the Sierra’s harvests to the world, coming back to life — one vendor, one visitor, one community gathering at a time. We built this for Colfax. We built it for you.
Register for your free ticket at www.TheColfaxBazaar.com and join us on March 21st.
See you at the hunt.
— Historic Colfax Downtown Association

















