The Denver Post

Canopy install signals station is wrapping up

White fabric was also used elsewhere, including DIA

- By Joella Baumann

Much-needed renovation­s to Civic Center Station have progressed steadily over the past 15 months, worsening congestion at the intersecti­on of Colfax Avenue and Broadway.

But the pain should end in December, when the overhauled station opens, according to Nancy Kristof, a spokeswoma­n for Mortenson Constructi­on, which is leading the project with SEH architects.

The biggest clue that the project is nearing completion is the installati­on of a white fabric canopy that began Tuesday. It covers the boomerang shaped structure that will shelter the boarding area for the 16th Street Free MallRide, Kristof said Tuesday.

If the fabric looks familiar, that’s because it is. The same PTFE-coated fiberglass was used in the canopy designs for Union Station and Denver Internatio­nal Airport.

The look of the station is much more open than the former design, but functional­ly, the station hasn’t changed much.

The MallRide pickup circle and the bus bays under the building have increased in size.

The most drastic difference­s are the size of the station and a lane that allows northbound buses to cut from Broadway to Lincoln Avenue without turning onto Colfax.

“Before it was dark and dingy. Now, there’s a lot more light,” Mortenson project manager Dave Espinosa said. “It doesn’t allow for people to loiter, (the Regional Transporta­tion Distict) can keep an eye on things throughout and we’re getting three additional bus bays along the northbound street.”

 ?? Joe Amon, The Denver Post ?? Workers early last month poured concrete near the structure that will hold the white fabric canopy at the Civic Center Station being renovated in downtown Denver.
Joe Amon, The Denver Post Workers early last month poured concrete near the structure that will hold the white fabric canopy at the Civic Center Station being renovated in downtown Denver.

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