$1.00
April 22, 2021
ARAPAHOE COUNTY, COLORADO
A publication of
EnglewoodHerald.net
VOLUME 101 | ISSUE 8
Apartments could rise on old Sports Authority site Residential units, parking garage proposed for location along Hampden BY ELLIS ARNOLD EARNOLD@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
sion, began to talk about others’ need for food in the surrounding community. “We don’t worry about feeding our children, having enough to eat,” said Vee Henderson, a Holly Creek resident. “We don’t worry about food stamps and what they’ll buy — we all just live our lives, go to the store and buy whatever we want, but not everyone can do that. And so many people have lost their jobs during the pandemic, and it’s tough out there.” So Henderson and other women at Holly Creek put on a food drive
A prominent Englewood business site that fell to bankruptcy has seen redevelopment in recent years, and a push to add apartments there has returned with a vision that could help reshape the area near city hall. Nationwide big-box retailer Sports Authority once maintained its corporate headquarters across Hampden Avenue from the Englewood Civic Center. In March 2016, Sports Authority cited debt of $1.1 billion as the reason it filed for bankruptcy. What followed was the question of what would fill the property. A rough idea for a development that could have included apartments, offices, retail, restaurants or even a distillery or brewpub arose, according to development officials’ vision from years ago. The site includes the Earth Treks indoor climbing gym. Now, a plan for adding apartments next door could result in a four-story, 303-unit complex that would include its own five-story parking structure. The plan calls for a “wrap” design, meaning the garage would be hidden from view
SEE SENIORS, P19
SEE APARTMENTS, P20
Erin Young, director of the South Fellowship Food Bank, left, and Vee Henderson, a Holly Creek Retirement Community resident, PHOTOS BY ELLIS ARNOLD stand together during an April 15 pickup of donated food items at the retirement community in Centennial.
Seniors ‘blessed to be a blessing’ in food drive With many residents vaccinated, a joyous gathering sent off large donation to local food bank BY ELLIS ARNOLD EARNOLD@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Don Folsom, 80, left, helps pastor Dan Elliott load items from Holly Creek Retirement Community’s food drive into a van for South Fellowship Food Bank.
At a west Centennial seniorliving location, food isn’t one of the worries on residents’ minds. But a group of women at the Holly Creek Retirement Community, during a weekly Zoom discus-
INSIDE: VOICES: PAGE 12 | LIFE: PAGE 14 | CALENDAR: PAGE 17 | SPORTS: PAGE 23
WALLS OF WONDERMENT A look at the emergence of murals
P14