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“I think the Crowther house is one of those that is aching to be saved from the wrecking ball,” said Commissioner George Dennis.
“I think the Crowther house is one of those that is aching to be saved from the wrecking ball,” said Commissioner George Dennis.
“The amount of leasing velocity that we’ve witnessed in Cherry Creek is incredible,” said Dan Huml, who plans to develop a five-story building.
The house at 401 N. Madison St. sold for $4 million in May, but the buyer is a homebuilder that acquired the property for a planned pair of duplexes.
The proposal calls for the unit count at the Creekside Apartments complex on the Denver-Glendale border to jump from 328 to 1,232.
Some neighbors pushed back on rezoning what the owner called “a very underutilized portion of a very sought-after neighborhood.”
The New York-based retailer’s first Colorado outpost will be in the former location of Max Clothing, which moved earlier this year.
John Sheridan paid $1.9 million for the lot at 2826 E. 3rd Ave. The building on it will become his when the ground lease expires in 2031.
“There really is no comp to this home in all of Colorado,” said Pat Hamill.
The outdoor apparel and gear company closed a nearby store at 250 Columbine St. in January.
Antero Resources, currently based next to Union Station, has zeroed in on a planned office building at 201 Fillmore St.
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