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SRM Concrete, which has a Burnham Yard plant, submits plans for new facility north of Denver

Concept plans call for a new SRM ‘wet batch plant’ at 5150 N. Brighton Blvd.

SRM Concrete facility in Denver on Friday, July 25, 2025. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)
SRM Concrete facility in Denver on Friday, July 25, 2025. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)
Denver Post staff reporter Jessica Alvarado Gamez at the Post offices on Tuesday, Nov. 26, 2024. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)
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Smyrna, Tenn.-based may soon build a new facility north of Denver.

SRM has several locations in Colorado, including a plant in Denver at 1145 Quivas St. near Burnham Yard, the preferred location for a proposed new Broncos stadium and entertainment district.

Concept plans submitted to the city this month by , a Missouri-based firm that provides engineering and land surveying services, show a 4.92-acre site at 5150 N. Brighton Blvd. where some buildings will be removed to be replaced by a new SRM “wet batch plant.”

Drawings of the plan show two existing buildings on the south side of the property will remain, while two other buildings on the north side will be demolished.

The proposal also calls for a new office building near the center of the site, as well as truck and employee parking areas, a 28-by-40-foot drying pit, 3,100 square feet of “Conc Sand” space and trailer roadways.

An image of the concept plans submitted to the city for a new SRM "wet batch plant" at 5150 N. Brighton Blvd. (Image from Denver public records)
An image of the concept plans submitted to the city for a new SRM “wet batch plant” at 5150 N. Brighton Blvd. (Image from Denver public records)

Owned by Wood Glen Holdings II LLC, the land appears to be home to a combined restaurant and truck wash, a car detailing service provider, towing business, bar and Mexican restaurant. Denver property records show Wood Glen purchased the land in late 2014 for $950,000.

SRM’s property near Burnham Yard is considered a key piece of the Broncos’ plans, with the team’s preliminary concepts extending onto the concrete company’s site. However, earlier this year, SRM CEO Jeff Hollingshead told The Post that there is “no transaction or agreement in place” to sell their Quivas Street location.

Scott Feldt, a civil engineer with Premier Design Group who submitted the concept plan through the city’s online permitting and licensing center portal, said in an email Wednesday afternoon that the company does not have any comment at this time.

Representatives from SRM did not respond to The Postap requests for comment on the new facility.

SRM is a and operated ready-mix, aggregates and cement company founded in 1999 by Mike and Melissa Hollingshead. The company serves customers in 24 states with more than 8,500 team members, according to its website.

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