The Denver Post

Sad goodbye to bungalow, happy hello to old theater

Gear shop among moves caused by gentrifica­tion in Denver

- By John Meyer

Jimmy Funkhouser expects a swirl of conflictin­g emotions Sunday when he closes the doors to his store on Tennyson Street for the last time to make way for demolition and redevelopm­ent, a trend that is radically altering the funky character of the Berkeley neighborho­od.

“I’ll probably be on the porch crying my eyes out,” said Funkhouser, 36, who opened his Feral outdoor shop in 2016, believing Denver outdoor enthusiast­s would embrace an independen­t alternativ­e to chain retailers.

His dream isn’t dying, though. Thanks to a landlord who saw a winwin investment opportunit­y and a crowdfundi­ng campaign supported by Funkhouser’s most loyal customers, Feral will be moving three blocks south to be reborn in a former movie theater built in 1908.

With controvers­ial “slot homes” springing up along Tennyson, landlord John Horvat has plans to redevelop the property where Feral has been located in a bungalow

built in 1924. That left Funkhouser in a bind, seemingly with no place to move. Then at a breakfast meeting when Feral seemed doomed, Horvat asked Funkhouser what his plans were.

Funkhouser said his dream was to move into the former Berkeley Theater, built when Tennyson was an entertainm­ent district adjacent to the original Elitch Gardens more than a century ago. More recently the building was the home for more than 50 years of FlesherHin­ton Music, which moved to Wheat Ridge in 2016.

“I said, ‘This is our community, we’d love to be there, but there’s no way for us to pull it off. We’re probably going to have to close the store,’ ” Funkhouser recalled. “He said, ‘Do you think they’d consider selling it?’ I was like, ‘I don’t have that kind of money.’ He said, ‘Let me go talk to them.’ ”

Horvat bought the building for $1.6 million, confident it was a good investment in a neighborho­od with surging property values. He believed in Funkhouser, too.

“If both of those weren’t involved, I wouldn’t have done it,” Horvat said. “It had to be a good investment, and he had to be a good tenant. Both of those things existed. It was a right time, right place type of situation.”

That was only the first hurdle. Funkhouser had to come up with $95,000 to repurpose the interior of the building. That’s where the crowdfundi­ng effort via Indiegogo came in. As of Friday, the online campaign had raised $41,052.

It’s not a charity fundraiser. Funkhouser is offering store perks ranging from lifetime 20 percent store discounts, in return for $200 donations, down to Feral stickers for $10 contributi­ons. Giving customers a chance to feel like stakeholde­rs made more sense to him than taking out a loan and having to pay a bank $3,000 a month in interest.

The relocation of Feral is just the latest change on Tennyson Street, as gentrifica­tion is transformi­ng the entire neighborho­od.

Spruce for Men, a barbershop and men’s clothier across the street from Feral, is relocating a block south to make way for a new building.

“Everything I’ve been seeing is scraping all of these old, charming buildings with character and building these boxy, flat, huge (buildings),” said Becca Romero, who owns Spruce with her husband. “It’s losing a lot of its charm and personalit­y. I think by the end of the next three years, (the neighborho­od is) going to be unrecogniz­able.”

Eli Cox, who owns a men’s store called Berkeley Supply on the same block, is “very conflicted” by the trend.

“There is unstoppabl­e developmen­t, and it could put an end to the grittiness of the neighborho­od and the charm it once had,” Cox said. “But it’s hard for me to sit here and knock it with a thriving business because of it.”

The city councilman who represents the neighborho­od, Rafael Espinoza, is troubled by what he calls “poorly conceived” housing units along Tennyson and other gentrifyin­g neighborho­ods.

“One of the things I wish we could do is keep northwest Denver funky, but market forces and regulation­s aren’t conducive to supporting and sustaining historic and small local businesses,” Espinoza said. “I am glad, in this case, that it is just a relocation and more of a success story despite the displaceme­nt.”

Feral’s move will allow it to grow from 700 square feet to 4,400, affording Funkhouser the space to expand and diversify his inventory. Until now it was mostly limited to hiking and camping gear, but the new store will include ski gear and climbing equipment.

“We won’t have to go to customers and say, ‘We’d love to carry that but don’t have enough room,’ ” Funkhouser said. “We say that a lot here.”

Funkhouser got his first glimpse of “real mountain peaks” when he visited Colorado eight years ago on a backpackin­g trip with some buddies. At the time he was living in Evansville, Ind., but when the saw the Continenta­l Divide at the iconic Genesee overlook on Inter state 70, he told his crew, “I love you guys, but I’m leaving you. I’ve got to live here.”

In those days he was working as a regional director for Toys R Us. He sought and received a transfer to Colorado, and when he got here he noticed something perplexing about the local outdoors market. Evansville had two local independen­t outdoor gear shops, but he didn’t find that here.

“I was like, ‘Where are they? How is it possible that there are more independen­t outdoor gear shops in Evansville, Indiana, than Denver, Colorado?’ It blew my mind. I thought they’d be on every corner. I wanted to make that happen.”

He left Toys R Us in 2016, opening Feral that year, and this year he opened a second store in Idaho Springs. He expects to begin renovation of the new Denver location next month, doing much of the work himself. He hopes to reopen there in midNovembe­r.

The new store will have what Funkhouser is calling a “Cottage Industry Lab,” a revolving showcase for Colorado gear manufactur­ers that chain competitor­s overlook. Funkhouser also is proud of helping to save a community landmark, a connection to the past in a shifting urban landscape.

“I truly believe it is the crown jewel on Tennyson Street,” Funkhouser said. “We’ve lost so many beautiful buildings.”

 ?? Photos by Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post ?? Jimmy Funkhouser, left, owner of Feral Mountain Gear, and employee Josiah Cilladi pose at their store at 4320 Tennyson St. in Denver. The gear shop is closing Sunday because of major redevelopm­ent in the area. But this story will end happily: Thanks to a landlord who saw a winwin investment opportunit­y and support from Funkhouser’s customers, Feral will be moving three blocks south to be reborn in a former movie theater built in 1908.
Photos by Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post Jimmy Funkhouser, left, owner of Feral Mountain Gear, and employee Josiah Cilladi pose at their store at 4320 Tennyson St. in Denver. The gear shop is closing Sunday because of major redevelopm­ent in the area. But this story will end happily: Thanks to a landlord who saw a winwin investment opportunit­y and support from Funkhouser’s customers, Feral will be moving three blocks south to be reborn in a former movie theater built in 1908.
 ??  ?? Funkhouser stands in what will be his gear shop’s new space at 3936 Tennyson St., only three blocks south of where he’s been working since 2016.
Funkhouser stands in what will be his gear shop’s new space at 3936 Tennyson St., only three blocks south of where he’s been working since 2016.
 ?? Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post ?? New constructi­on and slot homes that dwarf smaller, more quaint homes, such as the one on the left, are becoming the norm along Tennyson Street in Denver. The relocation of Feral Mountain Gear is just the latest change on Tennyson Street, which is being transforme­d by gentrifica­tion. “It’s losing a lot of its charm and personalit­y . ... By the end of the next three years, (the neighborho­od is) going to be unrecogniz­able,” one business owner says.
Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post New constructi­on and slot homes that dwarf smaller, more quaint homes, such as the one on the left, are becoming the norm along Tennyson Street in Denver. The relocation of Feral Mountain Gear is just the latest change on Tennyson Street, which is being transforme­d by gentrifica­tion. “It’s losing a lot of its charm and personalit­y . ... By the end of the next three years, (the neighborho­od is) going to be unrecogniz­able,” one business owner says.

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