Over the next ten years it changed into a four-year institution, and offered both BS and BA degrees.
The 1920s and the 1930s brought change to the campus as two more buildings, the Foote and Porter Halls, were constructed.
By 1967, enrollment at the Colorado Women's College reached over 1,000 students and it switched back to being a four-year institution.
In 2004, it moved into the Merle Catherine Chambers Center for the Advancement of Women.
In 2015, the university ceased the college's degree-granting programs; in 2020, the college was disbanded and its remaining programs were reassigned to other university departments in the name of financial exigency.