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Archive of posts filed under the Jefferson Park category.

New Jefferson Park Project: HiVu 29

A new development in the popular Jefferson Park district has just been announced: HiVu 29. The project is located on the south side of W. 29th Avenue just west of Eliot Street overlooking Viking Park. HiVu 29 consists of 12 flats and 10 townhomes in a 4-story building. Units range from 775 SF to 1,500 SF and priced from the low $200s to the high $400ks. The project is being developed by Bill and John Seward of HiVu Partners, with BlueSky Studio as the architect. Here’s a rendering of the project, courtesy of BlueSky:

A sales office is currently located at the site. To sign up for more information, please visit the project website: www.HiVu29.com.


Jefferson Park, CPV Projects Move Forward

In my July 26 blog, I mentioned a new infill project in the Jefferson Park neighborhood. The project, Flats on 24th, is planned for mid-block on the north side of W. 24th Avenue between Clay and Decatur. Since then, I’ve been able to obtain a couple of preliminary renderings:

The project features a total of 51 condominium units in a configuration that including both stacked townhomes and flats. The Flats on 24th is now under development review with the city.

Across the river at 15th and Little Raven, the assisted-living residential facility being developed by Belfour Senior Care is moving forward. This second phase of the Archstone Commons PUD is taking shape as an upscale 200-unit senior facility to be known as the Cosmopolitan Club. The project includes a 160-unit parking garage as well as the renovation of the historic Moffat Station as a community center for the facility. The project architects are Klipp and Robert AM Stern Architects. Construction is planned to begin in 2007.


Hines Project Moves Forward

Yesterday the Lower Downtown Design Review Board met and one of the projects they discussed was the proposed Hines office project on Block 013 at 15th and Wynkoop. This is the development that will go next to the new EPA Building on the west half of the old Postal Annex block. If you’re not familiar with this project, I provide a description of it in my blog of May 8. With the building’s mass, scale, and form previously approved by the Board, yesterday the developers were looking for approval of the building’s facade design and materials.

One concern for this project was the sidewalk along 15th Street. Denver Public Works had been insisting since the beginning on an extra-wide sidewalk along this particular block of 15th that would have required the Hines building to have an arcade along the entire 15th Street facade in order to maintain the zero set-back and to continue the established street wall. Both the developer and the Board had been frustrated by this requirement by Public Works because it left virtually no alternative but a very non-LoDo-ish design that neither of them liked. Fortunately, after some convincing, Public Works changed its requirement and now the arcade is gone and the building’s facade will meet the sidewalk like all the other buildings in LoDo. That change, in addition to a few other modifications that the architect (Hartman-Cox) made since its last Board visit, resulted in the Board’s approving the building’s facade design. On the next appearance before the Board (and possibly the last), the developer will present and hopefully receive approval on the storefront and signage program, as well as on a few final design tweeks the Board requested.

With the EPA Building, this Hines project, the new Sugar Building, and several other infill projects planned for the area, we’re witnessing the next stage of the evolution of LoDo into a well-rounded, more intensive mixed-use urban district.

Moving on to Jefferson Park… thanks to one of my faithful DenverInfill operatives, I am pleased to present a preliminary rendering of the Bryant Street Townhomes, a project consisting of 8 townhome units situated at the corner of Bryant Street and W. 24th Avenue in the Jefferson Park neighborhood.

The project is being planned by developer Glen Wood. The firm doing the design is Bothwell Davis George Architects, who are located just up the street at 32nd and Tejon in the Highland neighborhood. As this project moves forward, detailed color renderings should become available.