
It’s the second Denver property that Urban Renaissance Group has lost to a lender in 2025.
It’s the second Denver property that Urban Renaissance Group has lost to a lender in 2025.
The failing restaurant changed hands in the acrimonious divorce of William and Renee Brinkerhoff, which cost more than $6 million in legal fees.
The pizza chain opened within the Tabor Center in 2010.
The company, which last month cut 8% of its staff, has been paying $25.50 a square foot at 1801 California St.
“We felt that a slightly smaller, more efficient space would be a better fit for where we’re at now,” said Ryan Lessmann, office managing principal for the firm’s Denver branch.
“But this is not the end,” according to Turing founder Jeff Casimir.
“Autism is wrought with conspiracy theories and random points of view, and it lacks precision. I think if we bring precision to it, it’ll change the game.”
The downtown operators that signed Dave Query’s Feb. 6 message include Walter Isenberg, Troy Guard and Pete Turner.
Documents submitted to Denver indicate there would be a mechanical bull.
Equity Commonwealth agreed last year to sell 17th Street Plaza.
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