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Topgolf Thornton proposal lands in the bunker with judge’s ruling halting project

Ruling says Thornton abused its discretion regarding city’s zoning laws

Topgolf in Centennial
Kathryn Scott/Special to The Denver Post
This August 2016 file photo shows Debbie Holle spending time at Topgolf in Centennial.
DENVER, CO - OCTOBER 2:  Staff portraits at the Denver Post studio.  (Photo by Eric Lutzens/The Denver Post)
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Getting your player ready...

A proposed 65,000-square-foot golf entertainment complex in Thornton has hit a major bump, after a judge ruled that the city failed to follow its own zoning laws when it granted a permit to Topgolf to move forward with the project.

The ruling by an Adams County district judge late last week rested on how Thornton defines public versus private business: Only the latter arrangement would be legal at the site on the southeast corner of Interstate 25 and 136th Avenue.

A lawsuit filed by a resident in the nearby Rolling Hills neighborhood contended that the project — which would boast a three-story, 102-bay driving range as well as a restaurant, bar and rooftop terrace — is in fact public and that Dallas-based Topgolf and the city had mischaracterized the project.

District Judge Michael Goodbee agreed and overturned resolutions that Thornton City Council .

Topgolf officials argued in the case that hitting balls at one of the company’s facilities requires the purchase of a membership card, making Topgolf a private venue allowed under the city’s business park zoning designation. But Goodbee said the membership requirement “is nominal” and that the card is “effectively a player’s club card which keeps track of your score and credit for the driving range.”

“This proposed facility is otherwise open to the general public and therefore is not private,” he wrote. “The court therefore finds that the Council’s determination that Topgolf is a ‘private’ facility was an abuse of their discretion.”

Topgolf has 30 locations open across the country and 10 more in the works. It opened its .  Thornton had approved $3.75 million in incentives for the project, which Topgolf said would generate 475 jobs.

Efforts to reach a Topgolf spokesperson were unsuccessful Monday. Thornton spokesman Todd Barnes said the city didn’t have a comment on the ruling as it hadn’t yet had a chance to fully review the decision.

Lotte Radoor, the Rolling Hills resident who filed the suit against Thornton in 2016, said she was “thrilled” the court ruled in the neighborhood’s favor.

“It’s not just an innocent outdoor driving range — it’s an outdoor nightclub and amusement center,” said Radoor, who lives just a few hundred feet from where the Topgolf facility would be built.

Neighbors , arguing that Topgolf would bring bright lighting and late-night noise to the periphery of a quiet neighborhood that hugs the Thorncreek Golf Course. They also said the 170-foot-tall nets designed to catch golf balls at Topgolf pose a danger to the bald eagles and pelicans that live in the area.

“I’m very hopeful that this is the end of it,” Radoor said Monday.

Topgolf’s troubles could impact other planned development in the area, namely a 14,500-square-foot ViewHouse sports bar and restaurant, which is slated for land adjacent to the Topgolf site.

ViewHouse spokeswoman Rachel Reida said Monday that the restaurant would love to be a part of the “synergy that Topgolf creates,” but she said ViewHouse’s plans in Thornton aren’t “that contingent” on what ultimately happens with Topgolf.

She said there is no “concrete schedule” for construction of what would be ViewHouse’s fourth location in metro Denver.

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