Times-Call (Longmont)

New Visit Longmont chief touts tourism

- Bizwest / Times-call By Lucas High

Sarah Leonard, the new executive director of Visit Longmont, joined the city’s tourismadv­ocacy arm is a move that appears somewhat serendipit­ous in hindsight.

The recent transplant from Alaska discovered Longmont recently when, while moving her freshman son into his campus digs at the University of Colorado Boulder, she struggled to find lodging in Boulder. She looked a few miles north and booked a hotel in Longmont.

“I explored Longmont on my own and I fell in love,” Leonard,

whose background is mostly in the non-profit and statewide tourism spheres, told Bizwest. “When this opportunit­y came up, I thought this could be our next adventure.”

Leonard, most recently the CEO of the Alaska Travel Industry Associatio­n, is, along with her husband who’s retiring from a local school district in Alaska, taking the next couple of months to transition into her new job and her new hometown.

“I’m super excited to be here and make an impact on more of a local, community-level,” she said.

Leonard, a member of the U.S. Travel Associatio­n’s board of directors, takes over leadership of Visit Longmont more than a year after the departure of former executive director Nancy Rezac. “The Visit Longmont board used the time without a director to work with the Colorado Tourism Office on its Reimagine Destinatio­n Program in a visioning and action planning process designed to advance tourism,” Longmont Downtown Developmen­t Authority executive director Kimberlee Mckee said in a January statement when Leonard’s hiring was announced.

TOURISM >> PAGE 2

“I’m coming in with Visit Longmont in a really solid place, but it is kind of a blank slate,” Leonard said.

The time without a director, combined with the COVID-19-ERA slowdown in the tourism industry, allowed for Visit Longmont’s board to reflect on its mission and solidify the successful elements of the organizati­on, she said.

“I think it gave them the board and staff the time to really focus on the processes and frameworks that could remain solid,” Leonard said. “So that’s what I’m walking into: a really solid organizati­on

with a super supportive board looking to take to the next level.”

Despite its proximity to a plethora of outdoorrec­reation options and the presence of a host of highly regarded breweries, restaurant­s and entertainm­ent venues, Longmont isn’t widely regarded as a tourist hotspot. Leonard said she thinks that’s about to change.

“I think this is a welcoming community that’s on the verge of really developing and becoming more attractive, with a lot of experience­s, food, microbrews, distilleri­es and other things for people to do and spend money that supports local businesses,” she said. “… Not enough people look at Longmont as a visitors’ destinatio­n, but there are

so many great opportunit­ies” for those who do visit the city. “That’s part of what was so appealing as a travel marketer.”

Longmont’s lack of a large convention and hotel space is an ongoing challenge for tourism profession­als in the city, who have struggled in recent years to attract business travelers since the Plaza Convention Center closed in 2018 and the adjoining Best Western Plus Plaza Hotel was purchased by a developer intent on transformi­ng the lodge into apartments in 2021.

That challenge could soon be mitigated by The Thrash Group, a developer behind Colorado hotel projects such as the Origin Red Rocks in Golden and the Origin Westminste­r,

that is planning a $24.5 million, 84-room hotel on the site of cityowned parking at the lot northwest corner of Kimbark Street and Third Avenue.

“We’re starting to talk about for smaller group meetings and associatio­n events,” Leonard said. “There’s an opportunit­y to create a package, maybe not with a big space in the short term, for really unique spaces for 50 or 100 people. That still generates important economic activity for businesses.”

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