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Fire crews knock down wildfire that prompted evacuations in northern Colorado

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Fire crews knock down wildfire that prompted evacuations in northern Colorado


Fire crews are extinguishing hot spots on a wildfire in northern Colorado that prompted evacuations early Wednesday for people living near Carter Lake in Larimer County.

The Cougar Run fire was estimated at about 3 1/2 acres at about 8:30 a.m., down from an earlier estimate of 10 acres, according to the Larimer County Sheriff’s Office. The cause for the fire, which is burning on state land, remains unknown. 

The mandatory evacuation remained in effect as crews continue to work but were lifted at about 10:30 a.m., the sheriff’s office said.

Voluntary evacuations were also being urged for residents in the area of Blue Mountain and Spring Valley, west of Carter Lake, the agency said. 

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Crews from the sheriff’s office, the state’s fire division and Berthoud and Loveland fire departments are on scene, the sheriff’s office said. A helicopter was ordered. 

Fire restrictions are in effect for areas below 9,000 feet in unincorporated parts of Larimer County, barring uncontained open fires and smoking in open areas, such as trails and open spaces. 

“Elevated to critical fire weather” is expected across the lower Front Range foothills and Interstate 25 corridor Wednesday due to warm, dry and breezy conditions, according to the National Weather Service.  Moisture is expected to lower fire risk starting Thursday and through the weekend, with daily chances of showers and thunderstorms, the service said.

A separate fire that sparked northwest of Boulder grew to about 2 acres before crews stopped its progress earlier Wednesday. An evacuation warning was issued for the Goat Trail fire just before 4 a.m.



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What the heck is happening in downtown Denver?

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What the heck is happening in downtown Denver?


That was the thinking of The Luzzatto Company, which paid $3.2 million for the two skyscrapers at California and 17th streets a year ago in April. Compared with the buildings’ 2008 sale of $112 million, that’s about 3 cents on the dollar. The plan is to turn the nearly 1 million square feet of underused office space into High Fidelity Plaza, a 700-unit apartment complex filled with urban amenities like a bodega, childcare center and bookstore. It’s also next to a light-rail stop. 

The conversion will cost the Los Angeles investors about $315 million. But thanks to a low-interest $63 million loan from Denver’s Downtown Development Authority — “the minimum necessary to make this economically viable,” president Asher Luzzatto said — it’s a bet worth taking.

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DDA, a quasi-governmental entity to finance downtown improvements, took the wager. The organization had already approved three multimillion dollar loans to private developers for office-to-housing conversions. And the High Fidelity project seemed vital to infusing vibrancy back into the city’s center. 

Tourists, convention goers and local visitors have returned to downtown, especially along 16th Street, which completed a multiyear makeover last fall. Foot traffic is pretty much back to prepandemic levels, reaching 95% of traffic measured in 2019, according to data market researcher Placer.ai provided to the Downtown Denver Partnership, a separate organization that promotes the city’s economic center. 

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But the office market is different. While other major cities are still below their 2019 office occupancy levels, downtown Denver last month had the worst office recovery rate of them all. The city’s reputation as a top place for remote work and downtown’s outdated perception of pandemic insecurity and homeless encampments probably hasn’t helped.

In May, office visits to downtown Denver office buildings were off by 48.4% compared to 2019, according to Placer data, which uses anonymized cellphone data of phones in an office for at least three hours are presumably owned by a worker.  

Funding for all this comes from $570 million in city bonds approved by downtown voters in 2024. And so far, DDA has approved $225 million in loans and grants, mostly to commercial applicants, some small merchants and the city for work to upgrade properties such as the McNichols Building and Civic Center and Skyline parks. Eventually, the loans must be repaid and the DDA must return the money to the city — plus interest.

The way Luzzatto sees it, this isn’t really a risk at all for the city or the future taxpayer dollars funding the loan.

“These aren’t grant monies. They’re loans. So unless the project or the market completely collapses beyond where it’s already collapsed, they (the city) should be really well positioned to both recover the full amount of their investment plus interest,” said Luzzatto, whose company also acquired the two Denver Energy Center buildings at 16th and Broadway last year for $5 million. 

“You ultimately put the onus on developers in private markets, but you also help. You help make the economics make sense ex-ante by providing these lower-interest loans to get the construction going.”

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The public funding is fueling fast decisions. The DDA board has approved at least 16 projects in less than a year. None of the multimillion-dollar loans to commercial developers have been funded, though. That’s largely because projects are still in the planning stage, getting permits and arranging other financing. Downtown’s high office vacancy rates, which include buildings that are no longer actively leasing, continue to rise, according to real estate broker CBRE. The pressure is on.

“We’ve lost, oh, I don’t know, 30, 40% of our employees, particularly in Upper Downtown just through flex work and some companies, many companies downsizing and such,” said Bill Mosher, a consultant to Denver Mayor Mike Johnston who is working with DDA to figure out how to attract more life to Upper Downtown.

pictogram visualization

Mosher’s done this before. In 2008, he helped create the DDA to pay back a $300 million federal loan to renovate Denver Union Station. DDA used a tool called tax increment financing, or TIF, which let the authority borrow money from future downtown property and sales taxes and pay it back in 30 years. The renovated Union Station opened in 2014 with a hotel, the A line to the airport, shops and restaurants. The loan was paid off in 2024.

Bill Mosher, a consultant to Denver Mayor Mike Johnston, in Civic Center Park. (Andy Colwell, Special to The Colorado Sun)

“It got paid off early,” Mosher said. 

And the payoff coincided with the mayor’s plan to use TIF again to solve the economic crisis in downtown. In 2024, the city’s downtown office market was more than 30% vacant. But the emptiness was far greater. Many companies still had leases, but their employees worked remotely, turning downtown office towers into zombie buildings with few people showing up in person. As leases came due, many opted for a smaller footprint, if they renewed at all. Vacancy rates kept rising.

Downtown voters overwhelmingly approved the plan in late 2024 and allowed DDA to tap $570 million in future taxes to invest in the city’s center. The TIF was amended to include Upper Downtown.

The DDA’s plan was straightforward. 

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“We’ve made a goal to try and eliminate over the years about 7 million square feet of vacant or obsolete office space. And we want to do that by either filling them with office workers, which is a challenge right now, or converting space to residential,” Mosher said. “And, you know, people always ask about demolition. We say that’s probably a third choice, but we’re not at the point where we want to buy buildings to tear down.”

But that’s the kind of quandary the city faced. Nobody was stepping up. Downtown restaurants, retailers and the office market were not recovering on their own. 

Denver buys a mall and then some

In December, the Denver City Council gave the DDA its blessing to buy the Denver Pavilions, the shopping mall between Welton Street and Tremont Place, for $37 million. That wasn’t in the plans a year earlier. 

“We had no intention of buying it,” Mosher said. “But if you’re going to focus on 16th Street and you’re going to focus on Upper Downtown and you’re sitting there with a potential foreclosure of Pavilions, it’s not a good situation.”

The 354,407-square-foot mall had shed anchor tenants like Uniqlo, Hard Rock Cafe and Banana Republic. “It had been in a precarious position for almost a year,” Mosher said. Financed in 2016 for $140 million, the Pavilions had an $85 million loan that was past due by the time DDA purchased the mall. The bank hadn’t been paid in six months, Mosher said. 

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“Frankly, the feeling we got from the bank, and the word we got from the bank, is they would sit on it for a couple of years and see what happened with Upper Downtown. And we felt this was a situation that we didn’t want to live with,” Mosher said. “We needed to control our own destiny.”

But most of the recent purchases and loans weren’t done by the city. Those are owned or managed by the DDA. In the case of the Pavilions, DDA was actually eyeing the two parking lots on 15th Street behind the mall, which were owned by another company. Without acquiring those, the city’s mall purchase risked another developer coming in with something else in mind instead of one in simpatico. The two parking lots cost DDA another $22.5 million.

The surface parking lots are active and bring in two-thirds of the mall’s parking revenue. Between retail tenants and the parking, the Pavilions is collecting $3.3 million in net revenue a year. The money is being invested back into the property, including setting aside $3.5 million to repair the underground parking garage — work that had been deferred for four years.

“What’s interesting about the Pavilions is that it’s 38% vacant,” Mosher said. “It’s actually 62% occupied. We’ve got some long-term active tenants.”

It’s desperate situations that are getting DDA’s attention. The owners of the Petroleum Building at 16th and Broadway had been trying to convert the 14-story office tower into housing for five years. In November, the DDA approved a $14 million low-interest loan for the office tower, which when it was built in 1957 housed the oil industry’s Petroleum Club, according to the National Register of Historic Places. 

LEFT: The Petroleum Building on the corner of Broadway and the 16th Street Mall in downtown Denver. (Kathryn Scott, Special to The Colorado Sun) RIGHT: A rendering of what a studio unit layout that would be part of the Petroleum Building’s conversion. (Handout)

Co-owner Tim Borst said he was thrilled to get the DDA funding. Combined with historic tax credits and their own investment and city support, the $70 million project aims to convert offices into 178 residential units with amenities like a yoga and fitness center, a penthouse dog park and gardening spaces. Ironically, there’s been one snafu so far: An office tenant who bought Borst’s coworking business still has a lease and is trying to renegotiate. 

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“Those tax credits, along with the DDA loan, are critical components for the project,” Borst said in an email. “We are in discussions with our final remaining office tenant and expect to have a resolution prior to construction commencement, which is currently anticipated for (January).”

But one DDA project has already fallen off the list. The Symes Building, at 16th and Champa, was approved for a $17 million loan last July. Plans call for converting the historic office building into 116 apartments. Developers had received city approval on their site development plans but then the lender booted them out. If the lender finds a new development partner, the project could return. But for now, it’s on hold for DDA funding.

“We’re not reserving the money,” Mosher said. “They would have to reapply and we would have to consider it. The advantage they have is the site development plan. And if a developer comes along and picks up the existing plans then they can move pretty quickly. We’re really interested in projects that can get going now. We’re not funding projects and saying, if you get your act together in five years, we’ll give you money.”

The plan for the 12-story University Building, at 910 16th St., is to turn the old office building into income-restricted housing. DDA approved a $14.5 million loan in July to convert it into 120 affordable rentals. The project is the furthest along with construction expected to begin in early 2027, according to Mosher.

Grants to give downtown a unique, local vibe

The latest iteration of DDA is still relatively new. Its first awards went out less than a year ago. Many recipients are small business owners, some who’ve already moved forward with expanding their business along 16th Street. 

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Sundae Artisan Ice Cream, which started in Vail in 2016, received a $750,000 DDA loan to expand in Denver. The new store, at 1600 Glenarm Place, officially opened Saturday. 

Over on 16th Street between Welton and California, Jevon Taylor has already received a half year of rent money from his DDA grant of $4.2 million. Taylor is taking over the ground floor of two buildings for Green Spaces Market, which will include artists and local vendors and food. It’s charging below-market rents. 

“We couldn’t do this without a grant,” said Taylor, who had operated a coworking space and marketplace in Five Points. “We’re also trying to push the needle and provide viable options for these kinds of opportunities to exist. My goal with this is to get beyond the five years we’re guaranteed (rent) and figure out how we can expand this to a larger footprint and longer term lease.”

The market is expected to open in September. As of May, all the spaces have been leased, including a spot to Konjo, which plans to open its third and largest Ethiopian eatery, he said.

“I think Denver is one of the only cities that is doing it on this level,” said Taylor, who’s also known for the False Ego fashion label. “I mean you see things like Kansas City, where the World Cup is coming and they’re giving two months of free rent to businesses. I think that’s absolute BS. I’m glad that Denver is giving us the opportunity to do this for a five-year span and letting us pilot this.”

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City’s spending on office conversions so far? “Not much.”

The larger loans for commercial conversions are still waiting for projects to get further along with building permits and additional financing. 

“Not much of it has been spent, frankly,” Mosher said. “Think of us as a bank. The High Fidelity project is a good example. We’re requiring their first lender and the DDA to go in together on the loan. So we won’t spend any money on the High Fidelity project until potentially 2028. It could be under construction and the developer’s equity is being spent before we come in with our money.”

The $570 million TIF doesn’t mean DDA has access to all that money at once. It’s based on collected sales and property tax revenues, so even the authority must consider how much more to loan based on the likelihood of being able to pay it back. 

The DDA has received 100 project proposals. Of those, 67 were ineligible or not selected, seven are on hold or missing information, 16 were awarded grants or loans and 10 are still in review.

“There aren’t many cities that have the resources of the DDA to help their downtown,” Mosher said. “That being said, the overall amount of money is not a lot. I mean, just look at $60 million going to 700 housing units. It’s expensive and so all we’re trying to do is get the market going in the right direction, give a couple of examples of things that can work and then hopefully the private market takes over.” 

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Similar efforts are happening in other cities that experienced a mass exodus of office workers in the pandemic. Dallas, which has used TIFs for decades to encourage growth, increased funding to developers in 2022 after watching companies move to its suburbs, according to a Pew Charitable Trusts report. In October, the Dallas City Council agreed to provide $103 million to redevelop the city’s tallest office building into a hotel. 

Why isn’t the downtown office market filling back up? Two words: remote work.

Denver’s low recovery rates has also been attributed to its “remote-friendly labor market,” said market researcher Placer, which ranked the city as having the worst pandemic office-recovery rate. Last month’s office visits were off by 48.4% compared with May 2019. Miami, the closest to a full recovery, was off by 11%.

But the city and state has long had a higher share of remote workers than all other states, according to U.S. Census data. It was that way in 2019, when 8.3% of workers said they worked some or all of their days at home. And it was that way in 2024, when “work at home” jumped to 22.9%.

Washington, D.C., took the lead in 2024, but Colorado was still the top state. 

The state’s large of work-from-home force is largely thanks to the Denver, Boulder and the Fort Collins metro areas. Boulder had the highest rate of work-from-home population in 2019 and 2024, at 13.7% and 28.7%, respectively, out of nearly 400 metro areas nationwide. Denver ranked fourth in both years, at 9.1% and 22.6%. Fort Collins, ranked seventh, had doubled to 20.9%. The U.S. average was 5.7% in 2019 and 13.3% in 2024.

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Postpandemic was indeed different in Denver, said Kourtny Garrett, president of the Downtown Denver Partnership, which promotes the city’s economic center. Garrett pushed for city intervention to help distressed landlords and small businesses that suffered as 16th Street spent more than three years under construction. It reopened last fall.

“Tech and government were two of our primary employers in downtown Denver and are also the two (with) the slowest to return to the office,” Garrett said. “Also, because of 16th Street construction, when a lot of downtowns were starting to see offices opening up and employees coming back, we had over a mile of our downtown under construction. … We’re enjoying the fruits of that construction today.”

Local experts say that now six years after the pandemic began, companies have figured out remote work. Many employers kept hybrid schedules, including the city of Denver, which expects its 14,280 employees to come in three days a week, though a recent HR survey found that 64% were showing up five days a week, a city spokesperson said.

Office leasing activity for commercial brokerage firm CBRE is “incredibly busy,” said Allison Berry, a senior vice president at CBRE in Denver. Tenants want the newest and nicest office spaces and always have, she said. “The vacancy rate is high in Denver because we have a lot of aging product.”

At the end of the first quarter, CBRE data had the city’s total vacancy rate at 38.9%, creeping up from 36.9% a year earlier. The vacancy rate includes buildings slated for apartment conversion or other non-office uses. 

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Remove those, Berry said, “and that obviously has an impact on our vacancy rate,” she said. Her back-of-the-napkin math on that would drop the downtown vacancy rate at least a few percentage points. Of course, she added, “It’s not just an issue for Denver. We’re just a smaller city so every tenant, every large tenant, has a huge impact on our vacancy rate.”

But there’s not enough public money to save every old building.

In April, the DDA board rejected a project from Revesco Properties, a Denver real estate investment firm that purchased Elitch Gardens with Kroenke Sports and Entertainment more than a decade ago. Revesco’s pitch was to get a DDA loan to turn the 16-story office tower at 475 17th St. into apartments. It was rejected because of the overall cost.

DDA officials said the project asked for nearly twice the amount of other approved conversion projects, much higher than the 20% maximum as outlined in the authority’s policy.

There’s a chance the proposal can be restructured to better fit the DDA’s objectives, so Revesco president and CEO Rhys Duggan doesn’t call it dead yet. 

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“But these projects are financially challenging and they’re expensive. Ironically, they’re less expensive than new build projects, but they still take a fair amount of government assistance to get them going,” Duggan said. “What we learned through COVID was that when office workers stopped showing up, we were over-officed downtown and we were under-residentialed downtown. We need bodies downtown, not just 9-to-5 bodies.”

Denver’s office market isn’t actually dead

The city still needs offices downtown, so developers have stepped up.

In February, the Florida-based commercial real estate company CP Group grabbed the massive Denver Place complex for $47.5 million. Occupying the entire block at 999 18th St., the nearly 1 million-square-foot building was essentially purchased at a 75% discount, though the deal wasn’t as much of a fire sale as it may seem. 

“We like the Denver market a lot,” said Angelo Bianco, CP Group’s managing partner whose company first became a local landlord when it purchased the nearby Granite Tower five years ago. “The Denver market has been suffering severely for a while. As a business model, we look to buy assets when they or the markets are what I call broken, with air quotes around broken.”

CP Group’s plan is to invest another $20 million into Denver Place and add amenities that potential tenants actually want. That includes a gym with towel service, indoor/outdoor tenant lounges and a place to buy food “because in our entire 21 million-square-foot portfolio, that’s the number one request,” Bianco said. “And we subsidize all vendors because you do not make money on the amenities. You make money because of the amenities.” 

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It’s not a blind gamble. Bianco said he is motivated by the city’s highly educated workforce, the city’s reputation for worst return-to-office recovery (he believes there will be a big turnaround soon), and the public and private push to convert aging office towers into other uses. 

“We’re a very good buyer, and so we’re able to close during really tough times,” Bianco said in an interview in early February. “Right now is a terrible time to sell any office in any market.”





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Colorado wildlife officers kill gray wolf linked to attacks on 22 sheep

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Colorado wildlife officers kill gray wolf linked to attacks on 22 sheep


Colorado Parks and Wildlife officials on Friday killed a gray wolf that attacked 22 sheep on the Western Slope since last summer, agency officials said.

After Parks and Wildlife agents “lethally removed” the uncollared gray wolf in Routt County, agency officials were able to confirm it was the same wolf that attacked livestock in Rio Blanco County in 2025 and early 2026.

Most recently the wolf attacked two sheep in Routt County on Wednesday and Thursday, state officials said in a news release Saturday.

Agency leaders did not specify whether all of the sheep attacks were fatal, and spokesperson Luke Perkins said more information will be included in a final report published on Parks and Wildlife’s website.

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Ranchers tried to deter the wolf by sending out range riders, using livestock guardian dogs and “scare devices,” having herders present with the sheep and applying for non-lethal hazing permits, state officials said.

The ranchers worked with the wildlife agency to use “all viable and reasonable non-lethal tools and techniques” to stop the attacks, Parks and Wildlife Director Laura Clellan said in a statement.

“The decision to pursue lethal actions is never an easy one, but the circumstances around this wolf’s repeated depredation history made this a difficult but necessary decision,” Clellan said.

The wolf was originally part of the Copper Creek Pack but has not been part of the pack since September 2024, state officials said.

Colorado’s handling of gray wolf reintroduction has remained in the spotlight since voters approved the measure in 2020.

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When is Denver going to hit 100 degrees?

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When is Denver going to hit 100 degrees?


For Denverites watching the weather forecast creep toward triple digits, there may be a few more weeks reprieve before temperatures on Colorado’s Front Range hit 100 degrees.

“So far this year we’ve had three 90-degree days, and we average at least one 100 degree day almost annually in Denver, so we’re just waiting to see that heat really build,” said Greg Heavener, warning coordination meteorologist with the National Weather Service’s Boulder office. “It doesn’t really look like in the next week or 10 days we’re going to get there.”

Hitting 100 degrees this early in June isn’t unheard of in Denver — the city’s earliest daily record high to hit 100 degrees was June 11, 2022, according to NWS data. But the three hottest June days on record all hit 105 degrees later in June in 2012 and 2018.

“Usually we see heat peak in late June and early July,” Heavener said. Humidity from the monsoon season, which typically starts later in July, may keep things a little cooler as the summer progresses, he added.

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Denver’s most recent 100-degree day was July 9, the only time the weather hit triple digits at Denver International Airport in 2025, according to the weather service.

Unlike lower elevations in Colorado, seeing multiple 100-degree days is relatively rare in Denver, NWS data shows. Even having two can earn a spot on the agency’s list of the greatest number of 100-degree days in a year.



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