
The 15-story building at 6900 E. Layton Ave. (BusinessDen file photo)
The world’s largest gold mining company could extract itself from its headquarters in the Denver Tech Center.
Newmont Corp. recently listed for sublease its three floors of office space — 110,000 square feet total — in the recently-built building at 6900 E. Layton Ave., according to a marketing brochure.
But the company insists it has “no current plans to relocate.”
“After a few post-COVID years of marketing part of our space at 6900 E. Layton without success, we’re now open to adjusting what portion of our footprint we make available,” said Newmont spokeswoman Shannon Brushe.
Brushe didn’t directly respond when asked whether Newmont would do a deal with a company wanting all three floors. Last month, the firm disclosed in a public filing that it would lay off 19 employees between its headquarters and a technical facility in Arapahoe County.
The $4.2 billion publicly traded company technically has five floors in the building. Newmont leased them before 6900 Layton broke ground in 2018.
The building was completed in the second half of 2020. By the following May, Newmont had subleased two floors to DCP Midstream Partners, an oil and gas firm.
DCP Midstream was acquired by Phillips 66 two years later, in 2023. It now is listing its ninth floor space for sublease, according to JLL broker Bruce Dodge, who started marketing the space four months ago.
“Before DCP, now Phillips, occupied this space, it had never been occupied by Newmont,” Dodge said.
The oil and gas firm still has its offices on about half of the 10th floor.
The building at 6900 E. Layton is part of the master-planned nine-block Belleview Station development off Interstate 25 in southeastern Denver. Two other office buildings are on-site. One of the others, at 7001 E. Belleview Ave., is home to Western Union’s headquarters.
Western Union has also shed space. The firm gave up one of its seven full floors to a local bank and another to an engineering firm earlier this year, public records show.
The financial services firm is headquartered in the 15-story building and built out offices on floors nine through 15, as well as portions of floors one, six and eight, according to a contractor on the project.
Western Union is also listing three more of its floors for sublease, according to a marketing brochure for the space.

The 15-story building at 6900 E. Layton Ave. (BusinessDen file photo)
The world’s largest gold mining company could extract itself from its headquarters in the Denver Tech Center.
Newmont Corp. recently listed for sublease its three floors of office space — 110,000 square feet total — in the recently-built building at 6900 E. Layton Ave., according to a marketing brochure.
But the company insists it has “no current plans to relocate.”
“After a few post-COVID years of marketing part of our space at 6900 E. Layton without success, we’re now open to adjusting what portion of our footprint we make available,” said Newmont spokeswoman Shannon Brushe.
Brushe didn’t directly respond when asked whether Newmont would do a deal with a company wanting all three floors. Last month, the firm disclosed in a public filing that it would lay off 19 employees between its headquarters and a technical facility in Arapahoe County.
The $4.2 billion publicly traded company technically has five floors in the building. Newmont leased them before 6900 Layton broke ground in 2018.
The building was completed in the second half of 2020. By the following May, Newmont had subleased two floors to DCP Midstream Partners, an oil and gas firm.
DCP Midstream was acquired by Phillips 66 two years later, in 2023. It now is listing its ninth floor space for sublease, according to JLL broker Bruce Dodge, who started marketing the space four months ago.
“Before DCP, now Phillips, occupied this space, it had never been occupied by Newmont,” Dodge said.
The oil and gas firm still has its offices on about half of the 10th floor.
The building at 6900 E. Layton is part of the master-planned nine-block Belleview Station development off Interstate 25 in southeastern Denver. Two other office buildings are on-site. One of the others, at 7001 E. Belleview Ave., is home to Western Union’s headquarters.
Western Union has also shed space. The firm gave up one of its seven full floors to a local bank and another to an engineering firm earlier this year, public records show.
The financial services firm is headquartered in the 15-story building and built out offices on floors nine through 15, as well as portions of floors one, six and eight, according to a contractor on the project.
Western Union is also listing three more of its floors for sublease, according to a marketing brochure for the space.