Denver Economy newsletter
Today's top economy stories from The Denver Post
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After rocky approval process, Westminster development opens model homes

The model homes are located in Uplands West, one of the community’s four distinct neighborhoods.

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Colorado regulators approve keeping coal plant open past retirement date while Xcel repairs another

Regulators say utility runs risk of not recovering costs if repairing Comanche 3 proves not to be best choice.

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Colorado settles hidden fees lawsuit against Greystar in the latest case resolved with landlord giant

One of Colorado’s largest landlords will soon be required to disclose the total price of its apartments to prospective tenants, ending its practice of not publicly listing additional fees in advertisements.

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‘Complete disaster’: Judge suggests receiver for I-70 warehouse in family feud

Kevin Semcken has four sons, three of whom he is suing for kicking him out of Certified Brands and Electronics Row, resale companies that he has lent $11 million to by his count.

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The history of Potter Highlands told through a blond, brick building

Steel and glass homes have replaced the brick bungalows and cottages of old across the city, a jarring contemporary aesthetic imposed on the fading charm of many of Denver’s older neighborhoods,

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State taps modular developer to build apartments near Governor’s Mansion

The state wants Adam Berger to put his boxes on top of a Cap Hill parking lot across from the Governor’s Mansion.

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LoDo landlords look to sweeten downtown with Museum of Ice Cream

Dan Huml wants to go from Formula One to frozen dessert.

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Colorado real estate development firm purchases downtown Denver office space for $7.2M