The Denver Post

EDGEWATER USES POT TAXES TO HELP BUILD CIVIC CENTER

New police station, library, city offices can thank pot taxes

- By John Aguilar

The $13 million municipal complex will open Sunday — complete with a bigger library, larger police station, a fitness center and city offices.

E DGEWATER» This weekend, thanks to its bustling marijuana trade, this tiny city on the western shore of Sloan’s Lake will forge a new civic identity with the opening of a $13 million municipal complex complete with library, police station, fitness center and city offices.

Without $3 million in tax money from the city’s half-dozen pot shops to put toward the project’s total cost, city manager HJ Stalf said, “We’d still be chasing it.”

And during that chase, Edgewater’s police force would still be working out of the cramped space of a former butcher’s shop and city staffers would continue toiling out of an office furniture store turned city hall on Sheridan Boulevard.

Now the soul of this city of 5,200 will be consolidat­ed in a colorful and gleaming new 55,000square-foot building at 1800 N. Harlan St.

A grand opening ceremony for the Edgewater Civic Center is scheduled for 2 p.m. Sunday.

“It gives us a civic identity that we’ve pretty much lacked for the last 50 years,” Stalf said, adding wryly: “It’s going to be the community gathering place — unless you’re coming here in the back of a patrol car.”

In charge of that part of the operation will be Police Chief John Mackey, who said the city’s dilapidate­d station on West 25th Avenue has so little space that the department had to store evidence from an April homicide with a neighborin­g agency.

The new facility boasts a secure parking lot for suspect intakes, in case anybody gets the notion that making an escape on foot is a good idea. There are plenty of interview rooms, spacious lockers for police equipment and a big room in the basement for evidence.

Edgewater has long been on the cutting edge of the legal retail marijuana arena in the metro area, making sales the day it became legal in Colorado in 2014 and allowing its stores to stay open until midnight. The city used sales tax revenues from cannabis to repave all of its streets.

It built the new facility with an eye toward burgeoning social and technologi­cal trends. The civic center features four charging stations for electric vehicles, and the entire building is outfitted with gender-neutral bathrooms in recognitio­n of the considerat­ions that have arisen around gender identity. The fitness center even has gender-neutral locker rooms.

The fitness center comes with a brand-new basketball court ringed by an elevated running track, and $250,000 of exercise equipment that provides users with a spectacula­r view of Denver’s skyline while they huff and puff their way through a workout.

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