A land swap deal with Westside Investment Partners was announced in January.
A land swap deal with Westside Investment Partners was announced in January.
The deal is expected to close this fall.
Properties on both ends of the land swap deal have been appraised at $12.76 million, according to the city.
Denver will turn the 155-acre former golf course, which last operated in 2018, into a park.
Sisters of Color renovated a run-down clubhouse but wasn’t able to use it.
Westside Investment Partners would build thousands of residential units on the 155-acre property if voters agree to it.
A city official said Save Open Space Denver, which scored a win at the ballot box in November, doesn’t support the “prevailing vision” for the 155 acres.
An opposing ballot question backed by the developer that owns the former golf course was rejected by Denver voters.
Dueling ballot measures, a lawsuit and a 2022 deadline. Here’s the latest in the saga of a developer and a conservation easement blocking redevelopment.
The course closed at the end of 2018, with the city set to begin work on a stormwater retention area. Operator: ‘We expect to be closed this year and next year.’
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