Rest easy, globe-trotting cannabis connoisseurs: Denver now has an openly marijuana-friendly hotel.

Nativ, which opened for business on Thursday in the LoDo District, has no lava lamps or Bob Marley posters, or whatever people generally associate with stoner culture. Colorado has been trying to ditch that image long before Amendment 64 passed, which allowed recreational marijuana to be purchased and consumed in private residences starting Jan. 1, 2014.

The hotel features a variety of suites and room packages, each with a distinct style and amenities. Each floor also has its own identity in an attempt to eliminate the mind-numbing monotony typically associated with hotels.

"It's definitely not a stoner hotel," Nativ COO Mike Alexander told The Denver Channel. "I think that in general, marijuana has a stigma attached to it and I think we're breaking that."

Aside from the luxurious rooms with flatscreen TVs, private patios with fire pits, mini bars — you get it, it's fancy — the hotel also features a bar and restaurant called Portions, fronted by chef Aaron May, which features a self-pour beer wall with 20 different craft brews. This is Colorado, after all.

The list of amenities, which includes a nightclub and, eventually, a private rooftop lounge, goes on — but let's get to the weed. Nativ is far from the first hotel in Colorado to allow patrons to indulge in recreational marijuana. But not all of them brag about it.

Let's be clear about one thing: People are not taking bong rips in the lobby or passing a blunt at the bar. Smoking in public places in Colorado, like parks or inside restaurants, is still illegal under the Clean Air Act. This means that guests can only smoke in designated areas or smoking rooms.

The hotel embraces cannabis in other forms as well. "All of our drinks are actually flavored with flavored cannabidiol and sweetened with Stevia. It's non-euphoric and non-psychoactive," said Courtney Meek, founder of CanBria, a bar and coffee lounge in the hotel lobby.

Thus far, the city of Denver has left the issue of smoking pot inside a hotel up to the owner, but the Clean Indoor Air Act "limits all smoking to at most 25 percent of rooms," according to the city's retail marijuana use guide. This also includes balconies that are visible from any public place.

But while Denver is likely the place where most tourists will land, we highly recommend venturing out of the city to enjoy the rest of Colorado.