New developments stoke cost-of-living fears among East Colfax’s immigrant and refugee communities

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Tensions are rising between residents along the East Colfax corridor and developers who are planning new condos and townhomes in one of the remaining affordable areas that many immigrants, refugees and day laborers have long called home.

Aurora’s Planning and Zoning Commission recently approved two housing projects in northwest Aurora that residents fear will lead to gentrification by increasing rents and insurance costs in the area. The developers behind the projects — condo buildings known as the Ambience project and townhomes referred to as the Grand Avenue project — argue they are taking abandoned and blighted areas plagued by crime and redeveloping them into better housing options.

Hundreds of people who live in the East Colfax corridor, which straddles Aurora and Denver, have rallied together to protest the projects, expected to break ground in the next couple of years. Many residents have also attended Aurora planning commission meetings, urging officials to deny the proposals, saying the expensive new builds do not fit the character of their neighborhoods.

“This community is where our day labor members have lived for decades,” Mateos Alvarez, director of the Dayton Street Day Labor Center in Aurora, said. “And now because of developments like this Ambience site, and others like Stanley Marketplace, Montview Plaza, the expansion of Anschutz campus, we increasingly cannot afford to live here.”

Three residents submitted an appeal to the city opposing the Grand Avenue project and asking City Council to reconsider the planning commission’s decision. Plans for the development include 53 single-family townhomes to be built on five “infill” sites on 3.45 acres of land. They’re slated for portions of Akron Street between 12th Avenue and 14th Avenue,  Alton Street between 13th Avenue and 14th Avenue, and 14th Avenue between Akron Street and Alton Street. The commission’s documents state that the development will be built on land that’s mostly vacant, aside from a few abandoned and developer-owned single-family buildings. A developer at an October planning commission meeting said the units would likely be in the $500,000 price range.

The Ambience project was approved earlier this year to build 44 multi-family units in three buildings at the southeast corner of Yosemite Street and East 14th Avenue. The buildings would sit on a 1.3-acre parcel of land that, aside from one abandoned building, is vacant, according to planning commission documents. The units are expected to be about 1,800 square feet and have two or three bedrooms, starting at around $600,000.

A group of residents march together ...
A group of residents march together during a protest of a luxury condo development Saturday, Oct. 15, 2022, near New Freedom Park in Aurora. (Photo by Daniel Brenner/Special to The Denver Post)

A group of organizations called the Grassroots Leadership Council, which includes the East Colfax Community Collective, has been working with residents to make their opposition known, even beyond the planning commission meetings. Although residents missed the official deadline to appeal the Ambience project to the City Council, the groups organized a protest against the project on Oct. 15 where 200 people gathered at New Freedom Park and marched through East Colfax.

Participants held up signs in different languages in front of the planned Ambience project, and chanted, “many cultures, one voice,” in English, Spanish, Burmese, Karen and other languages. They gave speeches in various languages as they discussed the impact such a project would have on their homes.

About 62% of people living along East Colfax were renters, according to 2013-2017 data, and the average cost of rent for a one-bedroom in the area is $1,100, a 12% increase from the year before, according to the online rental platform, Zumper.

One of the developers of the Ambience site, Aman Kochar of Yosemite Colfax Square LLC, lives in Aurora and said he and many of his partners came as immigrants to the U.S. themselves. His day job is working as an IT professional. The partners saw the lot that had been vacant for about 30 years as an opportunity, he told The Denver Post.

“I just want to tell people that we’re doing this to uplift the area,” he said. “That place has not a single house for sale. We’re doing this to increase the job, the economy, the opportunity zone, and when we sell … we don’t get opportunities on benefits. It’s only when we keep for some years that we get the benefits.”

The project has received support from Mayor Mike Coffman who said he wants to see a revitalization of the East Colfax corridor.

Police and code enforcement have received constant complaints from neighbors about crime in the area where the new condos will be built and it’s negatively affecting the homeowners, Coffman said.

Two kids look out their window ...
Two children look out of a window to watch a protest of a luxury condo development Saturday, Oct. 15, 2022, near New Freedom Park in Denver. (Photo by Daniel Brenner/Special to The Denver Post)

He called the East Colfax corridor the “toughest area in the city.” Coffman supports increased redevelopment, but he said the city is also working on finding ways to ensure more affordable housing options are also available through a new housing task force. He added that it’s going to be a balancing act of building market-rate apartment buildings and affordable housing or workforce housing that’s more attainable for people.

“The challenge is going to be, can you redevelop without pushing people out?” Coffman said.

For the residents who live along the corridor now, waiting on recommendations for policy changes in the future is not an option. They want to see changes to the neglected sections of the East Colfax corridor but not at the expense of their housing.

Rashid Ullah who lives in the corridor had worked the night shift the day before the protest, but he still attended because he and his family can’t afford increased rent, he said.

Ullah moved to the U.S. in 2009. He was born in Burma, Myanmar, grew up in Bangladesh and lived in a refugee camp for 18 years.

The apartment he lived in in 2010 in the East Colfax neighborhood is now double the cost and is not even well maintained, he said. He and one other adult in his household support their family members who live together – 18 of them in a four-bedroom unit with a basement.

“It’s really difficult for people who are low income here,” he said. “If they do this condo, the rent is increased … more people will move to different places.”

Like some of his immigrant neighbors, Ullah used to work at the JBS meat packing plant in Greeley. Many of them chose to live in the East Colfax area because of its access to public transportation and affordability, as well as a sense of community.

Say Ra Sein, right, from East ...
Say Ra Sein, right, from East Colfax Community Collective speaks into a microphone next to an interpreter during a protest of a luxury condo development Saturday, Oct. 15, 2022, near New Freedom Park in Denver. Advocacy groups in Aurora and Denver say the city is approving luxury developments that will displace families who depend on affordable housing, particularly in areas where immigrants and refugees live. (Photo by Daniel Brenner/Special to The Denver Post)

Say Ra Sein, who spoke in Karen, said through a translator at the Oct. 15 protest that she moved to the U.S. from a Thailand refugee camp in 2007 and has lived in East Colfax for 15 years.

“Right now, the expensive buildings that they will be building are right in front of my house,” she said. “Because they are in front of my house, I am scared that the rent will raise up every year in the future. In the past 15 years, my rent was $900 or lower, but now the rents keep going up every year and we almost cannot afford to pay rent.”

That’s what happened to the apartment building Celia Caballero was renting in Capitol Hill in 2007 where costs rose so much, she had to move, she said.

Caballero is now a homeowner in the 1300 block of Akron Street, and along with two other residents, she filed the appeal against the Grand Avenue project.

“We believe that the construction of this site will lead to the displacement of our community and will have the result of kicking out local community members from the neighborhood,” they wrote in their letter. “Property taxes and rents will increase to the point that we will be unable to afford to live here and we will be forced to leave.”

Caballero said their properties will be surrounded by the new luxury developments on all sides and she worries that the low-income immigrant communities who live there will be looked down upon. The 52-year-old Latina, worked two jobs for years as a single mother and participated in an additional work program so she could afford to buy her small house two decades ago. She now has a job in the cafeteria of a nearby school and makes $16 an hour, and she lives at her home with her niece and her son and his girlfriend.

The city’s existing infrastructure and public improvements won’t be enough to support the new developments and will likely create issues for the current residents along East Colfax, Caballero said. She’s also concerned about an increase in traffic near the schools and rising costs that would force families and children to move, reducing enrollment.

While Caballero believes more affordable housing is needed and that the East Colfax area has been neglected, these projects are not the solution, she said. She’d prefer to see the space used for a mix of affordable housing and a park or recreation center.

Nadeem Ibrahim, top, smiles at the ...
Nadeem Ibrahim, top, smiles at the conclusion of a protest of a luxury condo development Saturday, Oct. 15, 2022, near New Freedom Park in Denver. (Photo by Daniel Brenner/Special to The Denver Post)

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