Golden Triangle office, Five Points parking among real estate Trump wants to sell

Screen Shot 2025 03 04 at 5.05.22 PM

The César E. Chávez Memorial Building is one of 443 properties the federal government is looking to sell. (Google Maps)

The Trump administration is looking to make some deals in Denver — along with much of the country.

The General Services Administration, which manages the federal government’s real estate, included 23 Colorado properties on a list of more than 440 nationwide “designated for disposal.”

The most notable Denver property on the list is the César E. Chávez Memorial Building at 1244 Speer Blvd. The 10-story, 180,000-square-foot building houses more than 400 employees from seven federal agencies, according to the GSA website.

In Five Points, the GSA is looking to dispose of a 0.71-acre surface parking lot at 2200 Stout St. and two nearby parking garages sitting on 0.72 combined acres at 2100 California St. and 2101 Welton St.

The bulk of the Colorado real estate the feds are looking to sell sits in Lakewood, where the Denver Federal Center is home to the highest concentration of federal agencies outside of Washington, D.C. The 623-acre campus is bounded by 6th Avenue to the north and Alameda Avenue to the south, with Kipling Street to the east and Union Boulevard to the west. 

GSA’s list includes nearly 750,000 square feet of DFC buildings it would like to dispose of, which range from the 14-story building 67 to the tiny, 4,000-square-foot building 64A. It also mentions several parcels of DFC land.

The only Colorado building outside of the Denver metro area on the list is a 76,000-square-foot “federal building” and post office at 301 S. Howes St. in Fort Collins. 

GSA says the 440 properties across the nation “are not core to government operations.”

“Decades of funding deficiencies have resulted in many of these buildings becoming functionally obsolete and unsuitable for use by our federal workforce. We can no longer hope that funding will emerge to resolve these longstanding issues,” the GSA said in a statement Tuesday. 

The agency added that the deals for the properties don’t necessarily have to be traditional sales. Sale-leasebacks, ground leases and other forms of public/private partnerships are welcome, according to the agency.

Screen Shot 2025 03 04 at 5.05.22 PM

The César E. Chávez Memorial Building is one of 443 properties the federal government is looking to sell. (Google Maps)

The Trump administration is looking to make some deals in Denver — along with much of the country.

The General Services Administration, which manages the federal government’s real estate, included 23 Colorado properties on a list of more than 440 nationwide “designated for disposal.”

The most notable Denver property on the list is the César E. Chávez Memorial Building at 1244 Speer Blvd. The 10-story, 180,000-square-foot building houses more than 400 employees from seven federal agencies, according to the GSA website.

In Five Points, the GSA is looking to dispose of a 0.71-acre surface parking lot at 2200 Stout St. and two nearby parking garages sitting on 0.72 combined acres at 2100 California St. and 2101 Welton St.

The bulk of the Colorado real estate the feds are looking to sell sits in Lakewood, where the Denver Federal Center is home to the highest concentration of federal agencies outside of Washington, D.C. The 623-acre campus is bounded by 6th Avenue to the north and Alameda Avenue to the south, with Kipling Street to the east and Union Boulevard to the west. 

GSA’s list includes nearly 750,000 square feet of DFC buildings it would like to dispose of, which range from the 14-story building 67 to the tiny, 4,000-square-foot building 64A. It also mentions several parcels of DFC land.

The only Colorado building outside of the Denver metro area on the list is a 76,000-square-foot “federal building” and post office at 301 S. Howes St. in Fort Collins. 

GSA says the 440 properties across the nation “are not core to government operations.”

“Decades of funding deficiencies have resulted in many of these buildings becoming functionally obsolete and unsuitable for use by our federal workforce. We can no longer hope that funding will emerge to resolve these longstanding issues,” the GSA said in a statement Tuesday. 

The agency added that the deals for the properties don’t necessarily have to be traditional sales. Sale-leasebacks, ground leases and other forms of public/private partnerships are welcome, according to the agency.

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