Thursday, November 09, 2006
New 18-Story Office Tower Planned for Denver's CPV
Back on September 13th, we learned that an office project was in the works for the block bounded by 15th, Delgany, 16th, and the Light Rail tracks in Downtown's Central Platte Valley. Yesterday, the details of that project, now known as 1900 16th Street, were revealed in both the Rocky Mountain News (Trammell Crow Announces New Project) and the Denver Post (LoDo to Get $100 Million Office Tower).
The project consists of two parts. Planned for the half block facing 15th Street is a 1,200-space parking garage, which will provide parking for not only this project and the Gates HQ nearby, but for the CPV in general. On the half block facing 16th Street are sites for two office towers: One will be the 335,000 SF, 18-story project planned for the corner of 16th and Delgany reported in yesterday's articles. The second will be a shorter (about 10-story) 250,000 SF tower planned as a future phase at 16th and the railroad tracks at the base of the Millennium Bridge. Trammell Crow will be developing the project for the owner, with David Owen Tryba Architects doing the design.
Speaking of design... below a high-resolution, full-sized version of the rendering (courtesy of Trammell Crow/Rocky Mountain News). Visible in this image is, from left to right: the Gates Headquarters, Delgany and Wewatta Streets, the 1,200-space parking garage, the 18-story office tower, the future-phase shorter office tower, the existing Promenade Lofts and Riverfront Tower condo buildings, and the Millennium Bridge. In the background behind the proposed parking garage you can even see a completed Museum of Contemporary Arts/Denver building and the Monarch Mills condo project.

For another perspective, here's the site plan for this block from the Denver Commons PUD:

The site marked "19B" is Trammell Crow's proposed 18-story office tower, "19C" is the proposed 1,200-space parking garage, and "19A" is the future-phase shorter office tower.
Let's hope Downtown can experience in the near future some sustained job growth so that all of the office projects proposed of late can come to fruition and that even more can be pursued.
The project consists of two parts. Planned for the half block facing 15th Street is a 1,200-space parking garage, which will provide parking for not only this project and the Gates HQ nearby, but for the CPV in general. On the half block facing 16th Street are sites for two office towers: One will be the 335,000 SF, 18-story project planned for the corner of 16th and Delgany reported in yesterday's articles. The second will be a shorter (about 10-story) 250,000 SF tower planned as a future phase at 16th and the railroad tracks at the base of the Millennium Bridge. Trammell Crow will be developing the project for the owner, with David Owen Tryba Architects doing the design.
Speaking of design... below a high-resolution, full-sized version of the rendering (courtesy of Trammell Crow/Rocky Mountain News). Visible in this image is, from left to right: the Gates Headquarters, Delgany and Wewatta Streets, the 1,200-space parking garage, the 18-story office tower, the future-phase shorter office tower, the existing Promenade Lofts and Riverfront Tower condo buildings, and the Millennium Bridge. In the background behind the proposed parking garage you can even see a completed Museum of Contemporary Arts/Denver building and the Monarch Mills condo project.

For another perspective, here's the site plan for this block from the Denver Commons PUD:

The site marked "19B" is Trammell Crow's proposed 18-story office tower, "19C" is the proposed 1,200-space parking garage, and "19A" is the future-phase shorter office tower.
Let's hope Downtown can experience in the near future some sustained job growth so that all of the office projects proposed of late can come to fruition and that even more can be pursued.
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Cool! That building will make a huge difference downtown. If that light rail gets buried as a part of DUS, what will happen to the area where the tracks were? Enormous sidewalk?
Golly. Neo-modernism to the extreme. Looks like the Daly Building, the DC Central Library, and about 500 other Meisian office blocks from the 1960s.
Maybe we're suppose to be impressed since the top is a different color?
Note to all architects who hate faux-Colonialism and historicist architecture: THIS IS EXACTLY THE SAME THING!!!!
Maybe we're suppose to be impressed since the top is a different color?
Note to all architects who hate faux-Colonialism and historicist architecture: THIS IS EXACTLY THE SAME THING!!!!
Anyway, it's not an awful filler building. I don't particularly object to it. I just find it incredibly ironic how the same contemporary architects that so lambast faux-anything architecture are now going full-steam ahead with with faux-modernism.
Good observations, Mr. Beyondeecy. Unfortunately, Denver will forever be plagued with designs such at this: good intentioned, but ultimately rather similar to the oil boom boxes in central downtown. Too bad the more ornate designs of Postmodernism passed the city by (see Atlanta for some good looking, yet "architecturally dishonest" scrapers.)
Still, though, good to see more progress in the CPV. Hope they aren't just bluffing with the night-lighting.
Still, though, good to see more progress in the CPV. Hope they aren't just bluffing with the night-lighting.
Can Tryba ever do anything that isn't SAFE and ultimately BORING? Haven't seen any evidence of that yet. Very mediocre per usual.
I hope and want this building to be built!! And they can leave the architecture exactly as it is with its stunning night lighting too.
Shucks, if only "Denver could do better..."
Shucks, if only "Denver could do better..."
If all of the "infill" of the Platte Valley is going to be 16-20 story buildings, isn't that going to block the view of all of the "shorter buildings". I am a docent at the MCA-Denver, which is at the corner of 15th and Delgany. From the rooftop, it is a gorgeous view. It will be blocked now, by a huge building.
Trying to make too much money for a small area? Does the word "greed" come to mind.
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Trying to make too much money for a small area? Does the word "greed" come to mind.
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