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Should tenants battling assaults and break-ins be able to see a security assessment their landlord conducted?
Should tenants battling assaults and break-ins be able to see a security assessment their landlord conducted?
The owner of Denver Central Market was most concerned with access to the building’s rooftop mechanical systems.
A highly visible tenant-landlord feud that seemed to have been resolved in 2021 has resurfaced. Blame the A/C.
RiNo pioneer Ken Wolf and his investors are singing a different tune than Voicebox CEO Scott Simon, who blamed the closure earlier this year on his landlord.
The dispute became highly public over the summer when Wolf posted notices at the businesses telling Edens staff to keep out.
Signs posted at multiple businesses, including Denver Central Market, say “Edens personnel/agents are not welcome.”
The developer, who sold his real estate holdings to the firm and became a tenant, has also filed lawsuits to extend leases for Sushi-Rama and Il Posto.
“We should be acting like partners, not adversaries,” he said of the firm that paid $55 million for his real estate holdings, making him its biggest local tenant.
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