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Save the date. Former US Senator Hank Brown will be
the keynote speaker at the annual luncheon of the
Cherry Creek Chamber of Commerce. The luncheon will
be on February 17th at the JW Marriott Hotel.
LaSalle Investment Management has purchased the
2-building World Trade Center office towers in
downtown Denver for $157.8 million, or $205/SF. The
complex is located at 1625-75 Broadway with nearly
770,000 SF of office and retail space.
The Federal Transit Administration advanced
redevelopment of Union Station in downtown Denver
into the centerpiece for the FasTracks
transportation program with the issuance of a Record
of Decision on the project. The ROD outlines the
plans to redevelop the property and the commitments
necessary to offset the influence it will have on
the environment.
The former Health South building at 1000 South
Colorado Boulevard has been demolished and
construction has begun on a 16,000 SF retail complex
which will include Tokyo Joe's and Daphne's Greek
Café. A walkway will connect this project with
Glendale City Hall to the east.
Public hearings are coming up on rerouting of I-70
through northeast Denver. The viaduct was built in
1964 and like much of Colorado's highways needs
replacement between I-225 and Brighton Boulevard. A
5-year environmental impact study has narrowed the
options to include reconstruction at the same place
and movement of the highway northward out of the
Swansea and Elyria neighborhoods. The highway could
expand to 10-12 lanes total and options also include
tolls on the new highway regardless of location.
Brookfield Properties has announced that it has
revived its plans to build a 34-story, 730,000
square foot office tower in downtown Denver. To be
located behind the Denver Pavilions on 15th Street,
the property is planned to have 26 floors of office
space, a 2-story lobby, 7 stories of structured
parking and 2 levels of underground parking.
Development of the property is pending the success
of finding an anchor tenant for the property and the
degree of interest shown through pre-leasing.
The 186,000 square foot office building at 1875
Lawrence has been sold for $35 million or $188/SF.
Behringer Harvard Opportunity REIT purchased the
15-story property from Principal Life Insurance Co.
In October, the Lowry Redevelopment Authority
successfully refinanced its Tax Increment
Financing (TIF) bonds, securing available funds to
complete several public projects in the Lowry
community. The funds will allow for completion of
the Lowry Dog Park, Linear Park, Yosemite Open
Space and connection and additional enhancements
to the Great Lawn. In total, the LRA was able to
secure the $8.8 million needed to finish these
important community projects. More at
http://www.lowry.org/news/news.htm#5
Emich Volkswagen at 1260 South Colorado Boulevard
has completed its 14,000 SF showroom on the former
Mountain States Volkswagen site.
Callahan Capital Partners LLC recently revealed
plans for the Two Tabor Center office-building
project. To be located next to the existing One
Tabor Center building at 1200 17th Street, the new
building will boast 43 stories, total 830,000
square feet, and meet "green" construction
requirements necessary to receive the Silver
certification as mandated by the Leadership in
Energy and Environmental Design (LEED). Completion
of the building is anticipated for 2010.
Developer Buzz Geller has withdrawn his plans for
a 34-story condo tower at the intersection of
Speer Boulevard and Market Street in downtown
Denver upon receiving negative feedback from the
Lower Downtown Design Review Board. To have served
as a gateway to the downtown area, the building
would have been the most expensive condo building
ever planned for Denver at $300 million. But the
board considered the proposal to be too massive
for the site. Geller will now propose the site for
a shorter 8-story vision of his original plan, but
featuring office space in the development as well
as condos.
Two neighborhoods in Central Denver have been
proposed for rezoning in order to protect their
character. Proposed by City Council members Carla
Madison and Chris Nevitt for a 21.5-acre area of
South Park Hill and a 36-block area of West
Washington Park, the rezoning would prevent
multi-unit developments in those areas and also
limit the ability to combine smaller lots for
multi-unit development in the West Washington Park
neighborhood.
Construction of a new hotel on Colorado Boulevard
is currently underway by the Stonebridge
Companies. To be a renovation of the former
Sheraton Four Points at the SEC of South Colorado
Boulevard and Cherry Creek Drive South, the hotel
will boast 210 rooms and provide retail space
totaling more than 10,000 square feet. Completion
is scheduled for late 2009 and Phase II will add
another 210 rooms at the rear of the site.
Bush Development and Corporex have both made
presentations to local neighborhood organizations
regarding most of the block bounded by
Ellsworth/1st Avenue/ Steele/Adams. Both
developers would like to assemble the entire
block, but Bush already owns about a quarter of it
- the office buildings in the northeast quadrant
of the block. Both propose to rezone to RMU-30,
one of Denver's new transit oriented zones and
propose a high-end hotel combined with retail,
office and residential uses with underground
parking. Total building heights are not clear
yet, but may be as high as 10 -12 stories near the
north end of the site. Bush proposes LEED Gold
certification of at least a portion of the
development.
1st Bank and its developer, Bill Pauls, of the
Pauls Corp. have also presented their proposal for
most of the block bounded by 1st Avenue/2nd
Avenue/Steele/St. Paul to multiple neighborhood
organizations. The bank owns the Burger King and
former Hops brew pub sites and their own building
at 1st/St. Paul. The Wachovia Bank building at
1st/Steele is excluded. Bill Pauls emphasizes
that the proposal includes no hotel. Phase I
would be a 10-story office building to replace the
1stBank building at 1st/St. Paul with the bank and
other retail space on the first 2 levels and 4
levels of underground parking. Phase II would be
7-stories along Steele Street replacing the Hops
building with 1 or 2 levels of retail there as
well. 1st Bank would move into the Hops building
during Phase I and return to its present location
when Phase I is complete. The buildings will have
"very high" LEED certification. As an
alternative, office space could be in the upper
levels of Phase II, but the owner and developer
prefer residential use there.
Bob Matucci of Sturm Realty Group has reported to
the Cherry Creek Steering Committee that the
proposed PUD amendment for the Fillmore Place
redevelopment has been approved allowing
residential use above the parking structure on the
south side of East 2nd Avenue between
Fillmore/Milwaukee Streets and allowing extension
of the storefronts along the Fillmore Mall out to
the building wall above them.
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