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Tag: northeast park hill

  • Passage of Vibrant Denver bond allocates $70 million to Park Hill Park transformation

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    DENVER — Voters on Tuesday passed the Vibrant Denver bond package, meaning several infrastructure projects are now greenlit, including the $70 million transformation of Park Hill Park.

    Park Hill Park is Denver’s fourth-largest park and opened to the public eight days ago, but it is bare bones. Paths have quickly become popular for dog walkers and runners.

    Click here to see Denver7’s detailed timeline about the Park Hill Golf Course.

    Neighbors Chase Wagner and Ellie Cavanaugh enjoy walking their dog, Melo, along the paths.

    “Some of the sidewalks around here are a little narrower, so being able to come up here and run the golf course is super nice,” Wagner said.

    Denver7

    Pictured: Ellie Cavanaugh, Chase Wagner and their dog, Melo.

    At last week’s ribbon-cutting, city leaders warned that the park would remain in its current bare-bones state without voter approval of the bond.

    “This space is opening as a park today, but it will not be a full park if you don’t show up on Tuesday,” said Denver City Councilman Darrell Watson at the ribbon cutting. “Y’all heard me, it will not be a full park if you do not show up on Tuesday. Your vote is needed to ensure that the investments in this space deliver for you and your family.”

    In an interview with Denver7 on Wednesday, Watson expressed relief at the bond’s passage. When asked about a backup plan if Vibrant Denver hadn’t passed, Watson said the alternative would have been challenging.

    “Well, the Plan B was to try again,” Watson said. “So, within the powers of the city, we would have to find other options to fund it. It would have been very difficult.”

    DARRELL WATSON.jpg

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    Pictured: Darrell Watson, Denver City Council District 9

    The $70 million earmarked for the park is expected to pay for the first phase of construction.

    “I think with that $70 million, they’re definitely going to have it cleaned up,” Wagner said.

    While the funding is secured, some Northeast Park Hill neighbors like Deronn Turner are taking a wait-and-see approach.

    “I’m cautiously optimistic,” Turner said. “And I’m cautiously optimistic because we have to have follow-through.”

    DERONN TURNER.jpg

    Denver7

    Pictured: Deronn Turner, lives in Northeast Park Hill

    Turner hopes the park will become the crown jewel of her neighborhood, but emphasized the importance of the city following through on its plans.

    “I think this is an opportunity for the community, but specifically folks of color to say, you know, we’ve asked you for what we want, now we need you all to follow through with it,” Turner said.

    Preliminary plans from the design firm Sasaki include sports fields, a dog park and a field house.

    PARK HILL PARK 2.png

    Denver7

    Pictured: Design renderings posted outside the entrance to Park Hill Park

    However, nothing is set in stone. Watson said the neighborhood planning process is expected to take 12 to 18 months.

    “My hopes and dreams for this is similar to the hopes and dreams of the folks that voted,” Watson said. “They want to be able to have open space that their families can enjoy and build great memories right in Park Hill.”


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  • ‘Disbelief’ in Denver after Chauncey Billups arrest

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    The arrest of Chauncey Billups in a sprawling gambling investigation shook up the NBA — and his hometown.

    Billups is the coach of the Portland Trail Blazers, but he’s known in Colorado as “The King of Park Hill” and a former CU Boulder and Denver Nuggets basketball player.

    “There’s a lot of disbelief,” said Leon Kelly, the local minister and anti-violence activist, who has known Billups since he was a middle-schooler. 

    Kelly had heard rumors on Wednesday night that news might break about Billups, but only learned on Thursday that he had been arrested alongside more than 30 other people in an investigation that spans the nation and the world. Also arrested was Miami Heat guard Terry Rozier.

    “We’re seeing all over the headlines — our neighborhood hero, champion, standard bearer,” said Jeff Fard, better known as Brother Jeff Fard, the northeast Denver community leader. “A heck of a thing to wake up to is an understatement.”

    Billups was charged with participating in a conspiracy to fix high-stakes card games in Las Vegas, Miami, Manhattan and the Hamptons that were backed by La Cosa Nostra Crime families. 

    While the poker indictment makes sweeping allegations about Billups and the others, it references Billups specifically only in connection to card games in Las Vegas “in or around April 2019.” In those games, according to the indictment, Billups, among others, “organized and participated in these rigged games using a rigged shuffling machine …”

    Both Billups and Rozier face money laundering and wire fraud conspiracy charges. Prosecutors accused Rozier in a scheme to rig sports bets by altering athletes’ performances; Billups was not named in relation to that scheme.

    A mural on the Skyland Park basketball court is dedicated to NBA star Chauncey Billups. Oct. 23, 2025.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    A long legacy in Denver

    “I’ve known this kid — since he was a kid. I’ve seen him grow up,” Kelly said. Billups and his family, he said, “have, I feel, great morals and great values. You know, we often say that one is certainly innocent until proven guilty.”

    Born in 1976, Billups was raised in Park Hill in northeast Denver and attended George Washington High School in southeast Denver, where he was repeatedly honored as “Mr. Basketball” for the state of Colorado. He would eventually have the words “King of Park Hill” tattooed on his arm. 

    At CU Boulder, Billups took the Buffaloes to their first NCAA Tournament win in nearly 30 years

    “Chauncey Billups has been a valued member [of] the CU Buffs community. CU Athletics learned today through the media about the allegations against him. As this is an ongoing investigation which does not involve CU, we have no further comment,” university officials said in a statement.

    Billups eventually won an NBA championship with the Detroit Pistons in 2004. He also played for the Denver Nuggets from 1999 to 2000 and again from 2008 to 2011. Billups was inducted into the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame in 2015.

    Billups has been placed on leave from the Portland Trail Blazers, where he has been the head coach since 2021.

    He has remained a presence in Denver throughout his career. His likeness is shown in a large mural in Skyland Park, where he played as a young man.  While working in television in Los Angeles, he returned three days a week to Denver to be with his wife and three daughters, The Athletic reported at the time.

    Billups also is known for his involvement in the Porter-Billups Leadership Academy, a college prep program founded by former Regis University Head Coach Lonnie Porter, which Billups joined as a supporter in 2006. 

    “He has not forgotten where he comes from,” Kelly said.

    In recent years, he was part of an effort to renovate the historic Rossonian Hotel in Five Points, though he later separated from the project, and the project has not come to fruition.

    Billups also has stayed involved in local politics. He endorsed Mayor Mike Johnston in his 2023 elections campaign. 

    Fard expected the Park Hill community to stand with Billups. 

    “Chauncey is from Park Hill. He’s going to withstand this storm. We’re going to stand with him. And I guarantee you, at the end of all of whatever this is, Chauncey Billups will be standing tall. That’s Mr. Big Shot. That’s Park Hill,” Fard said.

    The court cases have shaken the NBA and grabbed the national spotlight.

    “The fraud is mind boggling,” FBI Director Kash Patel told reporters. “We’re talking about tens of millions of dollars in fraud and theft and robbery across a multi-year investigation.”

    The poker scheme is alleged to have cheated at least $7 million out of unsuspecting gamblers who were lured into rigged games with the chance to compete against former professional basketball players like Billups and Jones. 

    The indictment claims that games were rigged using sophisticated cheating technology, such as altered card-shuffling machines, hidden cameras in poker chip trays, special sunglasses and even X-ray equipment built into the table to read the cards of unsuspecting players.

    Once the targeted victims — known as “fish” — lost, Mafia families used extortion and violence to make sure they paid their gambling debts, Nocella said.

    Prosecutors are arguing for releasing Billups and Jones but with “substantial bail conditions,” including a prohibition on any form of gambling and travel restrictions.

    “My initial thoughts are caution not to be sucked into headlines and sensationalism that seems to drive a lot of the public narrative,” Fard said.

    Billups and Rozier were expected to make initial court appearances on Thursday.

    “God forbid … if it was true to any degree …, the question is, what happened? Was he pressured?” Kelly said, “Why? Why? Why? But, you know, again, we all make choices, and sometimes there are bad choices.”

    CPR News journalist Anthony Cotton and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Hundreds of affordable apartments approved for Colorado Boulevard colorado-boulevard-affordable-apartments-park-hill

    Hundreds of affordable apartments approved for Colorado Boulevard colorado-boulevard-affordable-apartments-park-hill

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    The last vacant parcel at 4050 N. Colorado Blvd. May 31, 2023.

    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    A developer has a key approval for building more than 300 apartments on vacant land near the Park Hill Golf Course on Colorado Boulevard.

    Denver City Council members voted on Monday to approve a rezoning plan for 4050 North Colorado Boulevard that paves the way for the project. Councilmembers voted 10-2 in favor of the rezoning, with Kevin Flynn and Amanda Sawyer in opposition.

    The rezoning applies to a block along Colorado Boulevard just south of Interstate 70 and near the 40th and Colorado A Line stop.

    While the primary goal of the plan was to rezone the empty 7-acre tract of land owned by the Urban Land Conservancy, the vote also rezoned an area currently occupied by a strip of restaurants and another affordable apartment complex, even though it is not part of the development project. 

    Both city officials and the Urban Land Conservancy described the plan’s details as “complicated.” The parcels occupied by the empty tract, the restaurants, and the existing apartment complex are all under a planned building group, which sets rules about what can be developed and how. 

    Urban Land Conservancy wanted to amend that plan in order to build hundreds of affordable housing units on the empty parcel of land. However, in order to do that, they needed to rezone the occupied southern parcel of land, which they were able to petition for due to owning over 51 percent of the land within the planned building group. 

    The petition to rezone the land received widespread support from the neighborhood, including that of the Northeast Park Hill Coalition, the local neighborhood group. The council also received some opposition to the plan, with critics citing increased traffic, lack of grocery stores, and other concerns. 

    DelWest, which owns the apartment complex in the southern tract, wrote to city council that they did not plan to formally object to the rezoning, but the company asked Urban Land Conservancy and the city to consider several concerns DelWest had about the future vision of the area. Their concerns included changes being made to the agreements outlined in the planned building group.

    This grass has been rezoned. May 31, 2023.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    OK, that’s interesting and all, but what are they going to do with the rezoned land?

    Urban Land Conservancy is now free to develop the northern tract of land, pending the mayor’s signature. As detailed in a proposal sent to the city, Urban Land Conservancy plans to build three apartment buildings for permanently affordable, multifamily housing. They’ll be between five and twelve stories tall. The first phase of construction would bring 300 affordable units to the area, with room for further expansion. 

    A park, accessible paths, urban plazas and playgrounds are also included in the proposal. Urban Land Conservancy said plans for those features are not finalized, as conversations with stakeholders continue. 

    There are no plans in the works to redevelop the southern parcel of land,occupied by the strip of restaurants and the existing affordable housing complex. That means residents there, as well as the Popeye’s, Starbucks, Carl’s Jr., and Neko Ramen & Rice, aren’t going away anytime soon. (Ed. note: Unless they want to…) 

    The upcoming development isn’t the only complicated rezoning issue to impact the area.

    In 2023, voters rejected a ballot initiative that would have turned the nearby Park Hill Golf Course, which at the time stood empty, into a massive mixed-use development. The ballot question was highly contentious, and after Denverites voted against it, city council voted to rezone the area to bring tee time back to the former golf course. However, the developer that currently owns the golf course hasn’t put a timeline on when the putting green will reopen.  

    Editor’s note: This article was updated on 10/2/24 at 5:36 p.m. to include information from a more recent version of the Urban Land Conservancy’s plan for the land.

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