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Denver set to issue first batch of bonds and buy properties for northeast drainage projects

Platte to Park Hill plan, estimated to cost up to $298M, has controversial components

Kent Manrique shoots on the 18th hole at the City Park Golf Course on March 9, 2016 in Denver. Denver is looking to upgrade the storm drainage system and selected the western portion of City Park Golf Course to create a detention area to capture water after big storms.
Denver Post file
Kent Manrique shoots on the 18th hole at the City Park Golf Course on March 9, 2016 in Denver. Denver is looking to upgrade the storm drainage system and selected the western portion of City Park Golf Course to create a detention area to capture water after big storms.
Jon Murray portrait
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Denver Public Works officials have received approval to borrow an initial $116 million for the Platte to Park Hill storm drainage projects and to buy up 27 properties needed for a channel along 39th Avenue.

The issuing bonds will enable the city to get started on the design and construction of several controversial projects that have stirred passions in several northeast Denver neighborhoods. That vocal opposition is based in part on .

The City Council voted 9-3 Monday night to approve the bond issuance, which is capped at $116 million, and in the 39th Avenue corridor between Franklin and Steele streets.

About $115 million from the bonds will go toward a Platte to Park Hill budget that is expected to  in coming years. City officials have said they likely will seek to borrow up to $91 million more in a future bond issuance, with other sources covering the remainder.

Those bonds will be paid off using , which also will cover other projects. The higher fees will cost the average single-family household $116 more a year by 2020.

A map produced by Denver Public Works shows the major components of the Platte to Park Hill drainage projects.
Provided by Denver Public Works
A map produced by Denver Public Works shows the major components of the Platte to Park Hill drainage projects.

While the Platte to Park Hill projects’ inclusion in the storm increases plan , its vote Monday came with little discussion.

Debbie Ortega noted that she had lodged several objections to the projects in recent months and said she wouldn’t repeat them. She joined Rafael Espinoza and Paul Kashmann, who also opposed the rate hikes, in voting no on the new measures.

The controversy stems from the Platte to Park Hill projects’ scope and cost, plus the fact that many of the drainage improvements in the Montclair and Park Hill basins will be felt in areas to the north of the neighborhoods hosting the projects.

Platte to Park Hill’s major pieces are a detention area at City Park Golf Course, which will require major changes to the course and a significant loss of trees; the new mile-long 39th Avenue open drainage channel, lined with 12 acres of new open space; the creation of a second detention area on the northeast corner of Park Hill Golf Club, to slow the flow of stormwater northward; and a larger outfall on the South Platte River at Globeville Landing Park to handle water directed there, through underground pipes, from the other components.

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