The Denver Post

59 acres of federal land hits the market

- By John Aguilar John Aguilar: 303-954-1695, jaguilar@denverpost.com or @abuvthefol­d

A vacant 59-acre plot of land in Lakewood with a convoluted history is back up for sale, two years after it could have been the site of a 500- to 600-unit lowincome housing complex.

The parcel at the corner of West Sixth Avenue and Simms Street, and next to a W-Line light-rail station, is owned by the federal government and was listed for sale by the General Services Administra­tion last month. The starting bid is $15 million.

Lakewood Mayor Adam Paul described the property Wednesday as a “blank slate with some good bones and good things surroundin­g it,” even though it has a 15-acre section that would need to be remediated for environmen­tal contaminan­ts such as asbestos.

“It’s got great highway access. It’s at a light rail stop, and some of our biggest employers are in a radius around it,” he said.

A dense transit-oriented developmen­t, with multifamil­y housing and some retail could be a good fit, Paul surmised, considerin­g its proximity to the Denver Federal Center and St. Anthony Hospital.

Once home to the Denver Ordnance Plant, a World War IIera ammunition production facility, the property was put on the market by the federal government seven years ago.

Lakewood had proposed building a laboratory at the Federal Center in exchange for the land.

That deal never happened, and the property was relisted in 2016. Soon after, the Colorado Coalition for the Homeless sued to stop the auction, citing the federal McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act, which gives agencies that serve the homeless the right of first refusal when surplus federal properties are sold.

The coalition pitched a twophase approach to housing up to 1,000 people there with the use of temporary structures — trailers, geodesic dome shelters or large insulated tent structures. The proposal faced fierce opposition from neighborin­g residents and businesses.

Ultimately a federal judge in 2019 ruled that the coalition had not adequately explained how it would finance the multimilli­ondollar project and upheld a rejection of the project by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Cathy Alderman, a spokeswoma­n for the Colorado Coalition for the Homeless, said her organizati­on would no longer try to make a claim on the property.

“It’s a huge missed opportunit­y for people experienci­ng homelessne­ss and for affordable housing, which is desperatel­y needed,” she said Wednesday.

Bidders have until June 15 to make an offer. So far no bids have been made.

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