
“We wouldn’t have bought downtown and we wouldn’t have bought in DTC,” said co-founder Brent Kline.
“We wouldn’t have bought downtown and we wouldn’t have bought in DTC,” said co-founder Brent Kline.
The construction firm has proposed five stories with 59,100 rentable square feet but expects to keep the majority of the space for its own office.
Plans, while subject to change, call for 780,000 square feet of office space and about 600 residential units in buildings 8 to 13 stories tall.
The owners of the 14-story Petroleum Building, which opened in 1957 at 110 16th St., submitted a concept plan to the city.
The proposed 3300 Blake St. project would top out at seven stories on the southern end of the block, and 12 stories on the northern end.
Denver’s latest skyscraper landed a second law firm. Meanwhile, the mixed-use project across from Coors Field is filling up.
Pollack nixed plans for a Rosenberg’s location in Golden this year because he wasn’t confident he’d be able to find staff.
Larry Burgess bought his first building along Brighton in 1978. His son Neville claims his father is “defrauding” the firm they co-own.
The property is zoned for up to five stories, but at least 25 percent of the units would have to be income-restricted.
Summit and Rockefeller will build a 13-story, 250-unit complex at the corner of 12th Avenue and Delaware Street.
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