{"id":370,"date":"2025-05-29T12:00:13","date_gmt":"2025-05-29T12:00:13","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/existing-provider.com\/?p=370"},"modified":"2025-05-30T10:28:51","modified_gmt":"2025-05-30T10:28:51","slug":"time-of-reckoning-has-arrived-for-denvers-troubled-office-towers","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/existing-provider.com\/index.php\/2025\/05\/29\/time-of-reckoning-has-arrived-for-denvers-troubled-office-towers\/","title":{"rendered":"Time of reckoning has arrived for Denver\u2019s troubled office towers"},"content":{"rendered":"

Several of Downtown Denver’s largest towers sit half empty as the clock ticks on unsustainable debts that must be refinanced, repaid or renounced.<\/p>\n

Unable to find enough tenants to support debt payments, about three in 10 commercial mortgages tied to office buildings in metro Denver are delinquent, the third-worst showing in the country out of 50 metros, according to a report from Trepp last summer<\/a>.<\/p>\n

READ THE FULL PROJECT:<\/strong> At a crossroads: Downtown Denver is waiting for its rebound<\/a><\/p>\n

Lenders, tired of waiting for a rebound, have taken over management or ownership of several buildings, including the iconic Wells Fargo Center<\/a>, which the Denver Nuggets feature in their skyline logo, and the Denver Energy Center<\/a>.<\/p>\n

\u201cI think we have a long road,\u201d said Amy Aldridge, partner at Tributary Real Estate. \u201cHonestly, we have a lot of 1980s high-rise towers that are mostly vacant. People want to come back to the office, but they don’t want to come back to the 1980s office.\u201d<\/p>\n

Discounts of 80% to 90% or more below the prior purchase price, once unimaginable, have emerged in the past year on oil boom-era buildings. Colorado Plaza Tower I and Tower II<\/a>, at 633 and 621 17th St., sold in April for a jaw-dropping 98% discount. Valued for $200 million as recently as 2019, the towers could only fetch $3.2 million, sending an SOS flare soaring above the downtown skyline.<\/p>\n

Newer office buildings in Lower Downtown, Union Station and the Central Platte Valley, while not at capacity, remain highly rentable. For office towers built after 2000, the vacancy rate averages a manageable 16.8%, about half the rate seen for the office towers built during the oil and gas boom in the late ’70s and early ’80s. <\/p>\n

While some longtime downtown tenants are leaving for trendier markets like Antero Resources to Cherry Creek or Xcel Energy to the River North Art District, those committed to downtown still have appealing options, but not in the area with the heaviest concentration of office towers.<\/p>\n

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Click to enlarge<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

A flight to quality is underway, and it comes at the expense of older towers in Upper Downtown and Skyline Park.\u00a0Downtown’s office market is essentially cannibalizing itself to survive.<\/p>\n

Downtown Denver’s most distressed office towers are in a zone that stretches from Lawrence Street to Lincoln Street and from 14th Street to 20th Street, which mostly overlaps with an area known as Upper Downtown, home to the highest concentration of commercial real estate in the Rocky Mountain region.<\/p>\n

It was the part of the metro area hardest hit in the pandemic and it has been the slowest to recover, according to Denver’s Downtown Development Authority Plan of Development, which Denver City Council amended and adopted on Dec. 9.<\/p>\n

Thirty properties in Upper Downtown have been identified as distressed or deteriorating, defined as marketing over 40% of their rentable building area for lease. That list includes the Wells Fargo Center, 1999 Broadway, and the Lincoln Crossing tower.<\/p>\n

A Denver Post analysis of the 105 largest downtown office buildings, with 100,000 or more square feet, found that more than a third face extreme financial distress that extended beyond a high vacancy rate.<\/p>\n

That includes a loan default; a lender appointing a third party to manage a building, known as a receivership; a foreclosure where the lender took possession; a borrower voluntarily surrendering ownership to avoid a foreclosure; a distressed sale with a large discount, and buildings being deliberately emptied to prepare for a conversion to other uses.<\/p>\n

BusinessDen, a partner of The Denver Post, maintains a running list of Denver’s most distressed commercial buildings<\/a>, as well as a list of downtown’s emptiest buildings<\/a> and those slated for a residential conversion<\/a>. Here are some of the better-known downtown towers that are in trouble.<\/p>\n