Zocalo plans 16-story tower by Sloan’s Lake
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Burkett joins Pacific Project Management
Mary Burkett joined Pacific Project Management’s Denver office as a project coordinator.
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Denver’s interactive map shows energy usage
Benchmarking the energy performance of buildings is the first step to understanding and reducing energy consumption, because you can’t manage what you don’t measure. The Energize Denver Benchmarking Map
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One Dartmouth Place apartments sell for $65.5 million
Besyata Investment Group and The Scharf Group acquired the 418-unit community at 11100 E. Dartmouth Ave. in Denver.
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BMC invests in Aurora workforce housing
Denver-based BMC Investments paid $31.5 million, or $111,702 per unit, for Vista Park, a 282-unit, value-add asset at 12707 E. Mississippi Ave.
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Denver’s apartment lending fundamentals remain strong
I’d like to think I’m not the typical millennial. Can you blame me for skirting the label? There are so many negative associations with Gen Y or, the not-so-affectionately termed, “handout” generation. Narcissistic, lazy,
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High-end mountain bike company rides into Golden
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Boulder is considering purchasing historic, 110-acre Poor Farm property for $5.2 million
The Boulder City Council soon will vote on whether to approve, for $5.2 million, the purchase of the historic, 110-acre Boulder County Poor Farm property on 63rd Street.
If approved, the land would be folded into the city’s 45,000-acre Open Space and Mountain Parks division, and likely would serve a mix of agricultural and public recreational purposes in the future.
Only seven times in Boulder history has the city spent more than $5.2 million on an open space buy.
The Poor Farm property, a slice of county land northeast of Boulder, is highly recognizable from 63rd Street due to the red Queen Anne Victorian home that sits near the road.
Read the full story at DailyCamera.com
PHOTOS: New taproom brings pizza and rare beers to Curtis Park
After working on Hop Gardens for about two years, Matt Hawkins is ready to offer a bold assertion about the new Curtis Park business.
“I know that I have the best draft list in Sacramento,” said Hawkins, who owns the taproom and eatery at 2904 Franklin Blvd. with his wife, Jeannine, and his father, Pete.
Intrigued? You'll be able to decide for yourself when the locally owned business opens in the former Coffee Garden space on April 12. Hop Gardens will offer 24 taps, most of which will be beer,…
Mountain snowpack shrinks to 66 percent of normal, feds sound drought alarm
Colorado’s shrinking mountain snowpack — at 66 percent of normal statewide Thursday — forced an expanded federal drought designation covering nearly a quarter of the state with stream flows forecast at half of average, setting off a scramble to secure water supplies.
The scarcity spurred calls for storing more water in reservoirs to sustain the state’s growth boom.
“There’s going to be people without water,” especially in Southern Colorado, U.S. Department of Agriculture snow survey supervisor Brian Domonkos said. “It’s going to be a tight year.”
Denver Water officials planned to pull more of the H2O they deliver to 1.4 million metro residents from northern mountains because the upper South Platte River basin snowpack they rely on remains low. They’re seeking federal approval to expand storage by 77,000 acre-feet in Gross Reservoir west of Boulder, a controversial project.
State agencies, including Gov. John Hickenlooper’s staffers, have been monitoring drought impacts and weighing..