
A sale could close by the end of this week, according to a broker working the deal.
A sale could close by the end of this week, according to a broker working the deal.
“RiNo is a place that people are spreading to,” said Managing Partner Kristin Lentz of moving from LoDo.
The developer wants to replace the existing packaging facility with a 500-unit, 12-story residential building and a seven-story office building.
Residents allege Number 38 violated its city license within days. The owners dispute that and say they are following the rules.
“I think RiNo has missed the smell of barbecue in the air,” said Michael Graunke, who is opening Pit Fiend BBQ with Paul Llano.
Neighbors had objected to the noise at Number 38. But an official decided to renew its dance cabaret license if it makes changes to be quieter.
The City Council will decide if the company can build multiple buildings of five to seven stories with ground-floor retail space topped by residential.
“Keeping the buildings would be nice, but I think the best use would be higher density,” said buyer Alex Khandelwal, part of a different father-son team.
Cap Hill apartments go for $30M, Cisco Systems leases 21,000 square feet in LoDo and Hensel Phelps leases 7,600 square feet in RiNo.
Outdoor brand Arc’teryx will replace the lounge at 2601 Walnut St. But Scott Simon said Voicebox didn’t want to leave.
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