South Broadway theater in foreclosure as owner keeps cash for sprinkler work

Jewel Theater 2 scaled

The restored Jewel Theater at 1912 S. Broadway in Denver in 2023. (BusinessDen file)

A renovated theater along South Broadway in Denver’s Platt Park neighborhood is in foreclosure, but an owner says he’ll be able to pay off the bank.

The Jewel Theater building at 1912 S. Broadway was built a century ago and was home to a climbing gym for a quarter-century, until early 2018. In December of that year, real estate attorney Doug Norberg and business partner Paul Yaft bought it for $1.6 million and undertook renovations.

“We spent a bunch of money fixing broken and missing plaster and redoing flooring and fixing brick and stuff,” Norberg said last week. “We really tried to restore it to its former glory.”

Along the way, in September 2022, the pair took out a $2.3 million loan on the building and its adjacent parking lot from Bank of Denver.

1675808273401

Doug Norberg

Norberg said they had a great relationship with the bank. But in early 2024, the local financial institution was acquired by MidWestOne, which is based in Iowa.

“They have not been super friendly with us,” he said.

The situation came to a head over one final improvement needed to the building. Norberg said Denver required a fire alarm and sprinkler system to be installed, which could cost $200,000 to $400,000.

Norberg said he disagrees on the need for the work, but added that it would take months to see if Denver would reconsider, so he opted to just go ahead and do it.

Needing money for the work, Norberg said he asked MidWestOne to defer payments for two months, tacking the time onto the end of the loan. It would make sense for both parties, he said, because the sprinkler work increases the value of the loan’s collateral.

But MidWestOne didn’t want to do that. As a result, Norberg said, he and Yaft stopped making payments on the loan to preserve cash. That put it into default.

Norberg said the bank told him it would file to foreclose — and it did, submitting paperwork in mid-August. The bank said it’s still owed nearly all of the principal, just over $2.2 million. MidWestOne also initiated foreclosure on a separate $825,000 loan for the pair’s adjacent building at 1936-1938 Broadway.

Norberg finds the situation ironic, given that foreclosure is a slow-moving process and will take months.

“We’ll end up getting more time than we requested from you in the first place,” he said, addressing the bank.

thrillseekers entrance

The building was home to a climbing gym that closed in 2018. (BusinessDen file)

Norberg said he’s preparing to hire a firm to do the sprinkler work and intends to secure a new loan from another bank, which will allow him to pay off the one from MidWestOne long before a foreclosure auction. 

“The reasonable value of that theater is, I think, $6 million or more,” he said. “It’s not like they’re at risk. They are more than adequately secured in their collateral.”

Attorney Timothy Shea of Robinson Waters & O’Dorisio is representing MidWestOne in the proceedings. He did not respond to a request for comment.

In 2021 and 2022, the Jewel Theater was leased to a local company called Latin Event Co., which threw occasional music parties there, upsetting neighbors. Norberg said the theater hasn’t been used since.

“We’ve had a ton of holding costs and we’ve been servicing the debt until recently,” he said.

The Jewel is one of two theaters along the Broadway corridor in Denver now in foreclosure. The other is the onetime Webber Theater at 119 S. Broadway, which dates to the 1910s and showed pornographic flicks for years before being used by a distillery.

Jewel Theater 2 scaled

The restored Jewel Theater at 1912 S. Broadway in Denver in 2023. (BusinessDen file)

A renovated theater along South Broadway in Denver’s Platt Park neighborhood is in foreclosure, but an owner says he’ll be able to pay off the bank.

The Jewel Theater building at 1912 S. Broadway was built a century ago and was home to a climbing gym for a quarter-century, until early 2018. In December of that year, real estate attorney Doug Norberg and business partner Paul Yaft bought it for $1.6 million and undertook renovations.

“We spent a bunch of money fixing broken and missing plaster and redoing flooring and fixing brick and stuff,” Norberg said last week. “We really tried to restore it to its former glory.”

Along the way, in September 2022, the pair took out a $2.3 million loan on the building and its adjacent parking lot from Bank of Denver.

1675808273401

Doug Norberg

Norberg said they had a great relationship with the bank. But in early 2024, the local financial institution was acquired by MidWestOne, which is based in Iowa.

“They have not been super friendly with us,” he said.

The situation came to a head over one final improvement needed to the building. Norberg said Denver required a fire alarm and sprinkler system to be installed, which could cost $200,000 to $400,000.

Norberg said he disagrees on the need for the work, but added that it would take months to see if Denver would reconsider, so he opted to just go ahead and do it.

Needing money for the work, Norberg said he asked MidWestOne to defer payments for two months, tacking the time onto the end of the loan. It would make sense for both parties, he said, because the sprinkler work increases the value of the loan’s collateral.

But MidWestOne didn’t want to do that. As a result, Norberg said, he and Yaft stopped making payments on the loan to preserve cash. That put it into default.

Norberg said the bank told him it would file to foreclose — and it did, submitting paperwork in mid-August. The bank said it’s still owed nearly all of the principal, just over $2.2 million. MidWestOne also initiated foreclosure on a separate $825,000 loan for the pair’s adjacent building at 1936-1938 Broadway.

Norberg finds the situation ironic, given that foreclosure is a slow-moving process and will take months.

“We’ll end up getting more time than we requested from you in the first place,” he said, addressing the bank.

thrillseekers entrance

The building was home to a climbing gym that closed in 2018. (BusinessDen file)

Norberg said he’s preparing to hire a firm to do the sprinkler work and intends to secure a new loan from another bank, which will allow him to pay off the one from MidWestOne long before a foreclosure auction. 

“The reasonable value of that theater is, I think, $6 million or more,” he said. “It’s not like they’re at risk. They are more than adequately secured in their collateral.”

Attorney Timothy Shea of Robinson Waters & O’Dorisio is representing MidWestOne in the proceedings. He did not respond to a request for comment.

In 2021 and 2022, the Jewel Theater was leased to a local company called Latin Event Co., which threw occasional music parties there, upsetting neighbors. Norberg said the theater hasn’t been used since.

“We’ve had a ton of holding costs and we’ve been servicing the debt until recently,” he said.

The Jewel is one of two theaters along the Broadway corridor in Denver now in foreclosure. The other is the onetime Webber Theater at 119 S. Broadway, which dates to the 1910s and showed pornographic flicks for years before being used by a distillery.

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