
No plans have been submitted, but the owners said a building would have at least two levels of retail space and some income-restricted residential units.
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No plans have been submitted, but the owners said a building would have at least two levels of retail space and some income-restricted residential units.
The city plans to snuff out retail sales, with exceptions made only for hookahs and “premium” cigars.
“It wasn’t in the plan at all, yet here we are,” said XO Gift Co. co-owner Kat Furr. “I saw it was for lease, and kept driving by and had to check it out.”
The City Council moved the start date to 2023 and nixed a suggestion to allow sales at age-restricted and specialty vaping stores.
The Vancouver-based mountaineering brand, which opened a store at 250 Columbine St. in 2018, said it is “committed” to having a Denver location.
It opened its first Denver store in Cherry Creek Shopping Center last year and plans to open another at 1410 Larimer St. in December.
The buyer of the 0.22-acre lot at 3726 Brighton Blvd. is planning to build apartments with ground-floor retail space.
The firm is planning a $1 billion mixed-use project with retail, office and residential space in seven structures up to 12 stories tall.
A vaping store owner said the measure, if approved by the City Council, would put his business “in a desperate situation.”
“It’s sad because the consumer demand is still there,” said Perky Jerky co-founder Brian Levin. “It’s purely been a perfect storm of supply chain hell.”
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