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Denver Energy Center

Coordinates:39°44′32″N104°59′16″W / 39.74222°N 104.98778°W /39.74222; -104.98778
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Office complex in Denver, Colorado

Denver Energy Center
Map
Interactive map of Denver Energy Center
General information
StatusCompleted
Location1625 Broadway (I), 1675 Broadway (II),Denver,Colorado
Coordinates39°44′32″N104°59′16″W / 39.74222°N 104.98778°W /39.74222; -104.98778
Completed1979
OwnerLuzzatto Company
Height
Roof99 m (325 ft) (I), 109 m (358 ft) (II)
Technical details
Floor count28 (I), 29 (II)
Design and construction
ArchitectSkidmore, Owings and Merrill LLP

Denver Energy Center is anoffice complex inDenver,Colorado, comprising Denver Energy Center I and II. Both buildings were owned by Rosemont Realty Inc.[1] until the property was sold at auction in June 2022. It was formerly known asDenver World Trade Center, which relocated to another Denver location.[2]

Facilities

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Denver Energy Center I is 99 m (325 ft) tall and was completed in 1979 at 1625 Broadway. It has 28 floors and is the42nd tallest building in Denver.

Denver Energy Center II is 109 m (358 ft) tall and was completed in 1980 at 1675 Broadway. It has 29 floors and is the30th tallest building in Denver.

The office complex includes two Class A LEED Gold certified towers and have a combined total area of 785,549 square ft.

History

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The Denver Energy Center was completed in 1979.[3] In April 2013, it was sold for $176 million to Gemini Rosemont, a company based in Los Angeles.[3]

In June 2022, an affiliate of JP Morgan Chase was the sole bidder on the foreclosed Denver Energy Center buildings. The buyer was also the lender on the 785,549 square foot property, paying $88.2M for the building in the foreclosure auction.[4][5] In September 2025, the building was sold once again at auction to Luzzatto Company, this time for just $5.3 million, valuing it at just 3% of the purchase price it fetched in 2013.[5][6] Luzzatto announced plans to convert the two buildings into at least 1,200 apartments.[7]

Gallery

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See also

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References

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Current
See also

References

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  1. ^"Denver's World Trade Center towers sold - Denver Business Journal". Archived fromthe original on 2017-03-06.
  2. ^"Denver's World Trade Center buildings to be rebranded as namesake tenant leaves (Slideshow) - Denver Business Journal". Archived fromthe original on 2015-01-31.
  3. ^abGounley, Thomas (April 7, 2022)."Two-tower downtown Denver office complex going through foreclosure".The Denver Post. RetrievedOctober 18, 2025.
  4. ^"Denver Energy Center office complex sells in foreclosure auction following 45% drop in value".Denver Business Journal. June 23, 2022. RetrievedOctober 18, 2025.
  5. ^ab"Luzzatto Co. picks up more Denver offices with resi conversion in sight".The Real Deal. September 17, 2025. RetrievedOctober 18, 2025.
  6. ^Rose, Jonathan (September 18, 2025)."Luzzatto Co. Adds Another Denver Office Property With $5.25M Energy Center Buy".Bisnow. RetrievedOctober 18, 2025.
  7. ^Berdychowski, Bernadette (September 19, 2025)."This developer will soon own 4 Denver skyscrapers. The plan? Convert them".Denver Gazette. RetrievedOctober 18, 2025.
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