The Denver Post

San Diego firm plans to purchase parking spots

Denver City Council committee approves sale of spaces in garage

- By Joe Rubino and Andrew Kenney

A long-term redevelopm­ent plan in Cherry Creek North that calls for tearing down the Whole Foods and former Sears store has taken another step forward with a Denver City Council committee OK’ing the sale of spaces in a nearby parking garage.

The 198 parking spots, which the city of Denver would sell for $6 million, are in the garage that faces Second Avenue, between Josephine Street and Clayton Lane. The city bought them for $4.7 million in 2002 to provide parking for neighborho­od workers so more on-street spaces were available for shoppers. Denver rents them out for $75 a month.

San Diego developmen­t firm OliverMcMi­llan wants to buy the spots as part of a major overhaul of its Clayton Lane property. The company and its partners bought the retail pieces of Clayton Lane — a collection of buildings between East First and Second avenues from Josephine to Detroit streets — for $116.7 million in January 2016, city records show.

“This is not a triggering event for redevelopm­ent of the Clayton Lane site,” company spokeswoma­n Hilarie Portell said of the parking space sale. “Like any retail property owner, (OliverMcMi­llan) wants to manager their parking.”

The sale passed through committee last week but still requires approval from the entire Denver City Council.

If the sale is approved, Portell said OliverMcMi­llan won’t change the way the parking structure operates.

OliverMcMi­llan filed redevelopm­ent plans with the city in June 2017. Those preliminar­y documents called for demolition of the Whole Foods, the parking structure and the former Sears store on the property. In their place would rise six buildings atop a network of undergroun­d parking. That constructi­on would create 174,105 square feet of retail space and 527 residentia­l units between Clayton and Josephine.

OliverMcMi­llan has been acquired since

those documents were filed and the plans remain fluid, Portell said. She said no firm developmen­t plan or schedule exists.

Denver Councilman Wayne New, whose district includes Cherry Creek, said he is excited by the plans he has seen. He is expecting a new “hightech” Whole Foods, similar to the store near Union Station.

“It’s a huge project,” said New, who voted for the parking space sale. “In the last three to five years, of all the projects we’ve had in the Cherry Creek area, it’s the largest.”

A key will be getting Whole Foods, a long-term tenant, to agree to OliverMcMi­llan’s plans. The company did not respond to requests for comment Wednesday.

New said bringing in more residentia­l space to the neighborho­od should cause fewer traffic problems than other types of developmen­t. Parking and congestion have been concerns in the area for years. The city launched a sixmonth trial of free shuttle service connecting Cherry Creek with the Civic Center and Capital Hill neighborho­ods this fall with those issues in mind.

“I feel very good about it,” New said of OliverMcMi­llan’s early plans. “The main thing is making sure traffic stays on First Avenue as much as possible.”

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