The Denver Post

WeWork sues landlord of never-opened River North location

- By Thomas Gounley

WeWork’s plans for a Denargo Market location have devolved into a lawsuit.

The New York-based coworking firm, which has scaled back its plans for the Denver market over the past 13 months, earlier this month sued the owner of the 86,000-square-foot building at 2323 Delgany St.

WeWork signed a lease for the entire building in March 2019, but never opened. BusinessDe­n reported last May that WeWork had removed a reference to the planned location from its website.

The building is owned by WL Denver Delgany Owner LLC, previously described as a partnershi­p between Denver-based EverWest Real Estate Investors and Chicagobas­ed WHI Real Estate Partners. It paid $10.5 million for the property in January 2016, records show.

EverWest declined to comment on the litigation.

In its new lawsuit, WeWork states that its landlord was responsibl­e for making sure that the building was “in compliance with Legal Requiremen­ts with respect to use and occupancy of the Demised Premises for general and executive office use,” and that its landlord said the building was in that condition when WeWork signed its lease.

But WeWork alleges that when it tried to get a building permit from the city to build out its coworking space, it was told the building was not actually in compliance.

“Without limitation of other defects or deficienci­es, the deficienci­es with the Building Project that were brought to Tenant’s attention include but are not limited to: requiremen­ts for upgrading the existing fire protection system, including the main fire line; providing additional fire hydrants; providing or upgrading the fire line loop to service the Building Project; and providing an approved access road,” the lawsuit reads.

WeWork says it told its landlord about the issue, and that the landlord has not fixed the problems. WeWork says its landlord has declared that the company’s lease term began in September 2019, and runs through 2031. Base rent is $215,317.59 a month, according to the lawsuit.

WeWork says it paid its landlord $7.75 million as a surety bond in connection with its lease, and that it has paid at least some of the demanded rent “in protest” in an effort to avoid the landlord going off the surety bond.

The coworking firm is accusing its landlord of fraud and intentiona­l misreprese­ntation. It wants the court to order the lease rescinded, and to force the landlord to pay back the rent as well as additional damages.

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