
A Denver-area development firm is poised to buy 500 Lionshead Circle.
A Denver-area development firm is poised to buy 500 Lionshead Circle.
The 11th-hour order paused the sale for 14 days while a lawsuit moves ahead.
“We put a lot of time and effort into it,” Mike Kosloske said. “We redid everything to change it from more like a cabin to mountain chic.”
A federal order Friday ended the town’s ban on FedEx and UPS deliveries.
“Vail, not the market, will now decide when and how deliveries will be made,” they say.
They said they were defrauded by developer Peter Knobel. Now they’ll pay his legal bills.
The court also ruled that the investors and their attorneys do not have to pay $1.6 million in attorney fees to the project’s developers.
Vail Resorts claims it is being treated worse than other developers. Its lawsuit contains satellite images that purport to show Vail has allowed “significant construction to occur squarely in the middle of the bighorn sheep’s range” while blocking Vail Resorts from building.
The 146 companies in Colorado that made the cut were topped by a firm in Vail, but 97 of the companies are based in the Denver metro area.
“This was our seven-year, long-term plan all along, and we figured we would strike when the iron’s hot,” Wade Murphy said of relocating to Vail Valley.
Update your browser to view this website correctly. Update my browser now