The Denver Post

DOWNTOWN WESTMINSTE­R PLANNING OFFICES

- By Joe Rubino

Downtown Westminste­r has a preliminar­y agreement for its first office developmen­t to add to apartments and an Alamo Drafthouse.

The razed former mall turned mixedused mega-developmen­t known as Downtown Westminste­r has its first residents. Now, city officials and developers are looking to give those debut denizens more opportunit­ies to work close to home.

Acting as land seller and infrastruc­ture developer, Westminste­r last week announced it has a preliminar­y agreement to sell two plots to developer Schnitzer West which would, in turn, build the first office buildings as part of the 105-acre project.

The agreement covers two adjoining properties where Schnitzer West plans to build a combined 650,000 square feet of office space, according to that announceme­nt. Design work is already underway on the first piece, a six- or seven-story building with ground-floor retail space.

The news comes three months after the

Eaton Street Apartments, a 118-unit workforce housing building, opened. Wrapping around a public parking garage next to a legacy J.C. Penney, that project is the first of three large residentia­l complexes on track to open as part of the first phase of redevelopm­ent. The 255-unit Ascent Westminste­r should be done by year’s end, city marketing materials say, and the 226-unit Aspire Westminste­r is targeting move-ins in the first part of 2021.

“Adding an office user to Downtown Westminste­r takes it one step closer to a true, sustainabl­e downtown by ensuring a consistent daytime population of employees,” Westminste­r Mayor Herb Atchison said in a statement.

Designed to be a major commercial and residentia­l hub for the north metro burg, the 25-block Downtown Westminste­r area is bordered by West 92nd and West 88th Avenues, North Harlan Street and U.S. 36. It was the site of the Westminste­r Mall for many years, but when that shopping center fell out of favor and into disrepair, the city stepped in as a buyer with a grand vision. Now the J.C. Penney is the last remnant of the mall on a patch of prime, developabl­e land walking distance from the U.S. 36 and Sheridan Boulevard bus station.

Founded in Seattle in 1997, Schnitzer West keeps its Denver corporate office at the Centerpoin­t I and II office complex it owns near the Interstate 25-Colorado Boulevard interchang­e. Last month, the company announced plans to build a 12-story office building on Delagany Street in Denver’s River North Arts District. Westminste­r would be its most suburban Colorado landing place to date.

“With the continued growth of companies along the Denver-Boulder corridor, Downtown Westminste­r is located directly in the path of progress …,” Doug Zabel, the company’s managing investment principal,

said in a statement.

Zabel referred to Downtown Westminste­r as an “amenity-rich environmen­t.” At a time when companies are fighting to attract and retain talent, locating close to Downtown Westminste­r’s recently opened Alamo Drafthouse movie theater and a forthcomin­g Tattered Cover bookstore location could pay dividends.

It is unclear if Schnitzer West has tenants in mind for the project or what the developmen­t timeline will be. Zabel did not return a voicemail seeking comment Monday.

Marczyk Fine Foods was previously named as a ground-floor tenant for Origin Hotel, under constructi­on now in Downtown Westminste­r, but that space is now reserved for the bookstore. Pete Marczyk, the co-founder and CEO of the high-end grocery and deli business, said earlier this month he still hopes to be part of the redevelopm­ent but his company has some internal challenges to address first. Namely, figuring out if it can buy a site there.

“We are so behind the vision of Westminste­r and what they’re doing,” he said. “We definitely want to own that site for the long term.”

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