
A partnership led by Hyder Construction’s Tom McLagan purchased the three-story, 45,000-square-foot structure at 1000 N. Broadway this week.
A partnership led by Hyder Construction’s Tom McLagan purchased the three-story, 45,000-square-foot structure at 1000 N. Broadway this week.
The Denver-based firm said eXp “induced” multiple Re/Max franchisees to “abandon” their franchise before the end of the agreed-upon term.
The latest plans call for a seven-story, 153-room hotel to be built on 0.43 acres along Brighton Boulevard currently home to industrial buildings.
“The corner of 2nd and Clayton is truly a main and main location in Cherry Creek,” Broe Real Estate Group CEO Doug Wells said of the construction site.
“They decided they wanted to come into Denver and they cold-called me,” said Susan Powers, who took the structure from abandoned to fully leased.
Brian Watson’s real estate firm has been battling the FBI and Amazon for 18 months. The millions belong to “innocent” investors, his lawyers say.
Signs posted at multiple businesses, including Denver Central Market, say “Edens personnel/agents are not welcome.”
Two Denver-based firms plan to build a three-story apartment complex on the 1.2-acre site with 90 units and about 5,500 square feet of retail space.
The deal works out to $1,000 a square foot, which brokers said is a record for a multi-tenant retail building along the Front Range.
Terrance Hunt, Shane Ozment and Chris Cowan were sued by Newmark in May when they joined CBRE for violating a non-compete agreement.
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