
Redevelopment of the shuttered course faces hurdles that can only be removed by the Denver City Council, including a conservation easement and rezoning.
Redevelopment of the shuttered course faces hurdles that can only be removed by the Denver City Council, including a conservation easement and rezoning.
“My plan is to restore it as close as I can to when it was built,” said Pat Henry, founder of real estate firm HRE Group.
The agreement mandates that the redevelopment project, which would include an 11-story structure, break ground by the end of next year.
The coworking company leased two floors at Rev360 before it ever broke ground but the five-story structure has been completed and no one has moved in.
The organization’s previous executive director left at the end of June to become CEO of Denver-based Mercy Housing.
The structure’s glass curtain wall has been fully installed, with the exception of a few panels.
The building dates to the 1970s and is 43,578 square feet, according to property records. It sits on a 1.51-acre lot.
Kim Martin joined Otten Johnson right out of law school at the University of Denver in 2004. She is replacing Jim Johnson, who remains with the firm.
The Denver branches at 1625 Broadway and 1660 Wynkoop St. are among the 26 in the state the Minnesota-based company has closed or will close.
Also making moves in the downtown banking scene: PNC, Chase and Bank of Colorado.
Update your browser to view this website correctly. Update my browser now