The Denver Post

FUTURE OF ICONIC EAST COLFAX DINER UP IN THE AIR

- By Joe Rubino

Tom’s Diner owner wants to sell building to developer.

The decision of whether or not Tom’s Diner on East Colfax Avenue will become a Denver landmark against its owner’s wishes will be made by the City Council later this month after a committee of council members discussed — but ultimately did not find — ways to reach an amicable solution to the controvers­y Tuesday.

Whatever decision the City Council makes after an Aug. 26 public hearing, Tom Messina, the diner’s owner and namesake, says the restaurant will be closing.

“I’m leaving regardless. Tom’s Diner is done,” Messina said at a meeting Tuesday of the City Council’s land use, transporta­tion and infrastruc­ture committee.

Messina has a deal in place to sell the diner and surroundin­g parking lot at 601 E. Colfax to Greenwood Village-based Alberta Developmen­t Partners for $4.8 million. The company, which intends to raze the diner and build an eightstory apartment building in its place, filed paperwork seeking nonhistori­c status for the building in May.

Five Denver residents, with the support of a GoFundMe fundraisin­g campaign, 670 petition signatures and preservati­onfocused nonprofit Historic Denver, submitted a landmark applicatio­n in June against Messina’s wishes. One of those applicants, Tadem Bar owner Jessica Caouette, spoke Tuesday, responding to questions from council member Kendra Black on why she felt comfortabl­e pursuing something that essentiall­y takes away’s Messina’s property rights.

“We really think, as we said in the applicatio­n, that this building is historical­ly significan­t to Denver and especially to Colfax,” Caouette said.

“Being someone who has always loved Colfax, who basically grew up on Colfax, it’s valuable to me as a building.”

After the Denver Landmark Preservati­on Commission voted unanimousl­y to support landmarkin­g the 52-year-old Googie style building last month, the committee on Tuesday had two options: forward the issue to the entire Council or postpone the process to a specific date in the future.

Council member Candi CdeBaca sought to find middle ground between allowing for the demolition of the building — one of the few remaining buildings that once housed a location of Denver’s White Spot diner chain — and forcing Messina to back out of deal he has repeatedly said is key to his retirement.

City staff members on Tuesday said the process can be paused if Messina, the landmark applicants and the city’s landmark preservati­on commission all agree to take a break.

Right now, the process is happening under a strict deadline imposed by city’s landmark ordinance. If the City Council does not make a decision by Aug. 31, nonhistori­c status is automatica­lly conferred on the building and the demolition can proceed.

CdeBaca asked Messina if he would be amenable to “a pause to have a real conversati­on without the imposed timelines of the landmarkin­g process.”

He replied that the process has already been stressful for him and he did not want to risk the agreement he has in place with Alberta.

“Saving this building presents a lot of challenges,” he said. “I don’t want to lose what I have on whatifs.”

The issue will now be taken up at the City Council meeting Aug. 26.

The Tom’s Diner case is one of three landmark applicatio­ns filed on buildings against the wishes of their owners in the past few months in Denver.

The city’s planning and community developmen­t staff are working on updates to the landmark ordinance that would extend the review period from three weeks to 60 days and require a city-mediated meeting between property owners and residents. That update could be up for City Council approval next month. Joe Rubino: 303-954-2953, jrubino@denverpost.com or @RubinoJC

 ?? Denver Post file ?? The future of Tom’s Diner, an iconic East Colfax restaurant, is in the hands of the Denver City Council. Owner Tom Messina wants to sell the building to a developer, but giving the building status as a landmark has gained momentum.
Denver Post file The future of Tom’s Diner, an iconic East Colfax restaurant, is in the hands of the Denver City Council. Owner Tom Messina wants to sell the building to a developer, but giving the building status as a landmark has gained momentum.

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