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  • Award-winning Denver art gallery announces closure after 16 years in business

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    DENVER — Mirada Fine Art Gallery, which first opened in Indian Hills before relocating to downtown Denver in 2020, announced they will be closing its doors by the end of the year.

    For the past 16 years, Mirada Fine Art Gallery has been a rather popular spot in Denver’s art scene. They won many awards in Colorado including American Arts Awards for Top Galleries in the United States for 2022, 2023 and 2024.

    Richard Butler

    “Mirada is a gallery that features contemporary art from across North America,” said owner Steve Sonnen. “We feature a number of Colorado artists, but in addition to that, we have artists from Canada and Mexico and pretty much all of North America.”

    Sonnen called the decision to close “bittersweet,” noting that Mirada has always been a family-run operation. His sister, Jan Thompson, manages the gallery, and his wife handles bookkeeping. He said protecting the gallery’s atmosphere and its reputation played a major role in his decision not to sell.

    “We’ve built this very distinctive look and feel,” he said. “It’s a little bit of a part of me, and a part of my sister and my wife. If you just sold it, you lose all control over what happens with the gallery. And it would really break my heart to see it go in a totally different direction.”

    Sonnen said the plan to close has been in motion for years. When he moved Mirada downtown, he intentionally signed a five-year lease timed to end with his retirement.

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    Richard Butler

    “We always had planned to go out at this time, and so it’s nice to be able to go out on our own terms,” he said.

    The gallery will remain open through December 28, 2025. For the first time in its history, Mirada is offering rotating closeout sales featuring different artists each week.

    “In the 16 years we’ve been in business, we’ve never done a sale,” Sonnen said. “But this is sort of an unusual situation.”

    Sonnen and his wife plan to spend part of their retirement in the home they built in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. That is the place they fell in love with after honeymooning there decades ago. Still, he said leaving Mirada behind will bring its own mix of emotions.

    “When we started the closeout sale, I don’t think it really kicked in until then,” he said. “We had so many clients call or email to say they were sad we were going out of business. It’s going to be weird not being surrounded by this artwork and these amazing clients and artists, but I’m excited about the next chapter.”

    Sonnen said Mirada’s success belongs as much to its artists and supporters as it does to his family.

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    Mirada Fine Art Gallery

    Owners Steve and Jenni Sonnen

    “My goodbye message to both our artists and our clients would be that it was all them that did this,” he said. “We really appreciate their business and them supporting us. I think people got something out of the gallery, but we definitely got a lot back from them.”

    Mirada Fine Art Gallery will continue its regular hours and events throughout the year as it prepares for its final day of operation.

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    Richard Butler

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  • Some Alexander Mountain Fire evacuees pack up, others prepare to fight

    Some Alexander Mountain Fire evacuees pack up, others prepare to fight

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    LARIMER COUNTY, Colo. — As the Alexander Mountain Fire outside Loveland exploded in size Tuesday, so did the number of evacuees.

    With smoke from the 5,000+ acre fire looming behind them, J.B. Hersh and his son Jason are in the mandatory evacuation zone but have no plans to evacuate their home of 73 years.

    “We have a lot of work and a lot invested here,” said Hersh. “If it goes down, we go down.”

    Inside the expanded evacuation area, many evacuees left their sprinklers running in the shadow of the smoke.

    Meanwhile, law enforcement went door-to-door checking homes and leaving behind pink evacuation notice tape.

    “That’s how you pack in a hurry — only the necessities,” said Linda Arndt, who was packing up her home with the help of her two young grandsons. “I’m anxious, you know, with the boys here. I’m kind of scared.”

    Wildfire

    Alexander Mountain Fire explodes to over 5,000 acres as evacuations expand

    Nine-year-old Kaden Bonn, her older grandson, was taking the evacuation in stride.

    “It’s a little bit stressful because I’ve never had to move so much stuff at one time or evacuate in general,” he said. “But I’m ready.”

    It’s not the first time they’ve watched flames come too close to the home they hope will be standing when they return.

    For the Hersh family, irrigation systems are the last line of defense to hold out until the last minute.

    “We’re just hanging in, making the best of it. We’re not going to leave until it’s lapping at the door,” said Hersh.

    As Alexander Mountain Fire grows, residents forced to make difficult choices

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    Jaclyn Allen

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  • After 7 years, Fort Salonga townhouse project finally approved | Long Island Business News

    After 7 years, Fort Salonga townhouse project finally approved | Long Island Business News

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    A townhouse project in Fort Salonga received final approval from the Town of Huntington Planning Board Wednesday. 

    First pitched in Jan. 2017, the over-55 age-restricted development from Hauppauge-based Northwind Group will bring 74 townhouses to a portion of the Indian Hills Country Club. 

    Sales have already begun on the project known as the Preserve at Indian Hills and the development’s first phase of 38 homes is more than half sold. 

    The townhomes were built under the town’s Open Space Cluster District, a special zoning enacted by the town in 2010 to allow for maximum preservation of open space by clustering homes. The project preserves 130-acre, 18-hole golf course and the country club will continue to operate. 

    The 2,700-square-foot townhomes range in price from $1.25 million to $1.8 million and will have three bedrooms and three-and-a-half bathrooms. Though the project will have 74 townhouses, Northwind can eventually build an additional 12 units. 

    The plans also call for the construction of a new 26,000-square-foot clubhouse to be used by residents and members of the country club. However, that part of the project is on hold after a group of residents filed an Article 78 lawsuit to stop it, and that case is still pending. 

    Northwind hopes to start construction by the summer. 

    “The planning staff at the Town of Huntington has worked tirelessly over the last few years to perfect the plan and I want to thank the town for their efforts,” Jim Tsunis, Northwind principal, told LIBN. “I also want to thank the Fort Salonga Association for their efforts in shaping the community. This will be the nicest golf course community on Long Island.” 

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    David Winzelberg

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