The 10-story, 261-unit project is the third in the Denver area by Charlotte-based Crescent Communities.
The 10-story, 261-unit project is the third in the Denver area by Charlotte-based Crescent Communities.
CP Group, which paid $204 million last year for the 31-story building, plans to construct wings on two sides.
CTRL Collective operated in the space for about two years before yielding to the short-lived Flex Office – Denver.
Kendra Black also opted to not run again and three others are termed out, so there will be five City Council races without an incumbent next year.
RES Global took the final 43,000 square feet in the mixed-use project next to Coors Field, which also has a hotel, condos and retail space.
“It’s a magnet for young people,” Chicago-based Riverside Investment & Development’s CEO said as to why it’s building in Denver.
The 461-unit project, with 32-story and 38-story buildings along Broadway, has been called Block 176. That name will change.
San Francisco-based Drawbridge Realty paid $475 a square foot for the eight-story building. The seller bought it for $87 million in 2017.
Denver’s proposal to require residential developers incorporate income-restricted units in new projects came before a council committee on Tuesday, with two members bringing up efforts to grandfather in projects already underway.
Rod Atherton helped form trusts and companies for two ex-Amazon employees, which the company says were used to conceal kickbacks paid by a Denver developer.
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