
An addition for $5.5 million at 3144 W. Francis Walsh Place and a new building for $3.2 million at 2121 S. Broadway in Denver were the week’s top building permits.
An addition for $5.5 million at 3144 W. Francis Walsh Place and a new building for $3.2 million at 2121 S. Broadway in Denver were the week’s top building permits.
The Denver nonprofit has been manufacturing packaged food and providing job training in Curtis Park for 27 years but needed more space.
Owner Kevin Morrison, who rebranded his Tacos Tequila Whiskey in August to focus on takeout and delivery, said the eatery will close after a buyer is found.
But “demolition and construction are still years away,” CEO Gary Yamashita said of “the only remnants of the once-thriving, multi-block Japanese community.”
Law firms name partners and shareholders, a real estate firm hires a managing director, plus new faces in architecture and nonprofits.
The Denver Housing Authority is tripling its portfolio in the neighborhood and planning a riverfront park.
Colorado startups raised $1.9 billion, the highest amount of capital in one month in state history, according to SEC filings.
The team putting up One River North, which will feature a gash of greenery, went with a more conventional design for a new 370-unit apartment complex.
Boom Supersonic plans to break ground on a manufacturing facility in 2022, begin production in 2023 and roll out a completed aircraft in 2025.
Pipeline is changing for 2022. Previously a standalone email that arrived in inboxes late Friday morning, Pipeline will now be published Friday morning on our website and linked in BusinessDen’s daily email.
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