
The redevelopment of the 155-acre property along Colorado Boulevard will ultimately have to be approved by voters.
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The redevelopment of the 155-acre property along Colorado Boulevard will ultimately have to be approved by voters.
Timberline Steaks and Grille at DIA was set to lose its license Thursday for selling beer to underage police cadets, but a judge granted a stay until July 25.
The well owner disputes the county’s claims that the operation violates zoning laws and is unsafe.
Bikesource needs to vacate its current storefront by Aug. 7 but it hasn’t received the city’s approval to open in the new space it leased.
The development sites are two corners of the intersection, including the current home of Lowdown Brewery + Kitchen.
The proposals call for an eight-story, 125-unit hotel at 1709 Blake St. and a 12-story, 89-unit “apart-hotel” at 1480 Wewatta St.
“The penalty imposed does not fit the severity of the violation,” argues Timberline Steaks & Grille after it served beer to an underage police cadet.
The concept plans submitted last week double the total number of new conversions proposed downtown to four since December.
“This is a constitutional lawsuit,” John Bandimere III said in an interview Wednesday. “They should have never done this to small businesses and to the public and that it should never happen again.”
Denver gave developers a chance to avoid a new income-restricted housing mandate and plenty of firms wanted to be grandfathered in.
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