The numbers don’t lie: Downtown Denver is going to be crowded this weekend.

The fifth annual Denver Comic Con, which takes place June 17-19 at the Colorado Convention Center, is expected to bring more than 100,000 people. Denver PrideFest, which runs June 18-19 at Civic Center, last year drew 365,000 people over two days. And the Juneteenth Music Festival, which takes over the historic Five Points neighborhood, also includes street closures and a parade.

Together that means roughly a half-million people milling about downtown — using public transportation, riding bikes, driving, parking, eating and drinking.

Here’s what you need to know.

STREET CLOSURES

The following streets will be closed starting Friday and will reopen at 11:59 p.m. Sunday as part of PrideFest:

BANNOCK STREET from Colfax to 13th Avenue, beginning at 7 a.m.

14TH AVENUE from Cherokee Street to Broadway, beginning at 7 a.m.

COLFAX AVENUE eastbound: from Cherokee to Lincoln Street beginning at 6 p.m.

COLFAX AVENUE westbound: from Lincoln to Cherokee beginning at 6:30 p.m.

BROADWAY from the 16th Street Mall to 13th Avenue, beginning at 7 p.m.

For Juneteenth, Welton Street between 28th Street and Park Avenue West in Five Points will close Saturday morning and reopen Sunday.

PARADES

The Juneteenth Music Festival parade begins staging at 8 a.m. and runs 11 a.m. Saturday and takes place along 26th Avenue, beginning at Manual High School (26th Avenue and Gilpin Street) and ending at The Point at 26th Avenue and Welton Street in Five Points.

The PrideFest parade, the weekend’s biggest, will head east to the Capitol from Cheesman Park starting at 9:30 a.m. Sunday, going north on Franklin Street and turning west on East Colfax Avenue closing down intersections as it goes. See the full route at GLBTColorado.org.

PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION

Light rail, bus service and bicycles will be many people’s best (and cheapest, outside of cabs and ride-sharing services) options this weekend for getting around town. RTD’s website has some of the most straightforward and general tools for planning routes, scheduling and tracking your next ride. For more specific and tailored information, apps such as Transit (free via the App Store) will use your location to suggest every regional and local bus and light rail line in proximity to your location, including how long until it arrives and exact GPS positioning of the pickup location.

The Denver B-cycle program also offers 700 bikes at 88 locations in 10 central Denver neighborhoods. Bikes can be rented at one location ($9 per 24 hours of use; $3 per half-hour ride) and returned at another location. You can take unlimited trips that are 30 minutes or less at no additional cost. Visit the B-cycle’s FAQ for more detailed information and check out the station map (with dozens of locations in and around central downtown) at denver.bcycle.com.

PARKING

Denver Comic Con offers reserved, on-site (at the Colorado Convention Center) parking from $3.25-$5.50 per day via parkingpanda.com, but it’s going fast. So if you’re planning to attend, reserve now. You’re largely on your own for PrideFest and Juneteenth, although a number of parking apps offer customized, location-based searches regardless of whether you’re already downtown or on your way there. Click here for a curated list from The Denver Post’s tech reporter, including BestParking, ParkWhiz, ParkMe, Parkifi and CurbStand. Most are free and available via the iTunes and Google Play stores.