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Updated 3 months ago on . Most recent reply

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Rene Hosman
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Denver, CO
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WTF is a land swap?

Rene Hosman
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Denver, CO
ModeratorPosted

Where are my Denverites at?! 

This is the first time I've heard of a city or municipality doing something like this. I'd love to get takes from folks who have been around the investing & development scene longer than me - The city of Denver announced yesterday that the mayor has coordinated a land swap with a private developer. 

If you live in or around Denver you've probably heard of the Park Hill golf course - if not, here's a quick rundown

Background: 

1. Park Hill Golf Course was owned by a trust, in the wayyy distant past it was previously a dairy farm, but it has been operated as a golf course since the 1930's! 

2. In 1997, I don't fully understand why, the City of Denver paid the golf course owners $2mil to rezone this parcel as a "conservation easement" this was extremely restrictive zoning and meant it would essentially be destined to be a golf course for eternity 

3. 2018 golf course closes citing low revenue and high operating costs. 2019, the parcel was sold to a developer named Westside Investment Partners (WIP)  who intended to remove the conservation easement and develop this parcel in a highly sought after neighborhood of Denver

4. From around 2018, when the golf course closed, until 2021 local residents essentially used this giant open parcel of grassy land right in the city as open space. On most any day you could find people walking dogs, or children playing in the area.

Starting around 2021 WIP who clearly thought rezoning would be a no-brainer seemingly started to get frustrated with the pushback from the city and residents.

I can't say for sure what the reasoning was, but the developers at some point around this time put a chainlink fence around the entire property - its 155 acres. They cited insurance reasons, which could very well be true, but many residents felt it as a big "f you" 
Now folks from outside the community could argue this was an entitled stance from the residents, to feel they had access to this private land when they didn't, and that on the face is certainly true. But it's also true that this had been open space provided to the community for the better part of a century and now it was fenced off with not even a path or sidewalks around most of the perimeter. 

5. In 2021 there were two competing ballot measures that the citizens of Denver voted on - one measure from open-space advocates that would "keep status quo" and continue to prevent WIP from developing this parcel, the second measure sponsored by the WIP themselves that would exempt the property from the current zoning restrictions. 
What in the world would have happened if both completely opposing measures passed?? We still have no idea. And will never find out because the open-space advocates won their measure while the developers measure failed by a whopping 63%

6. in 2023, two years after losing the first ballot measure, WIP tried AGAIN, and this time they still lost with 58% of the vote against them

7. This second defeat at the ballot seemingly left WIP with few options, and it was looking like they way overpaid for this land that in it's current legal state could only be used as a golf course or park. 

Fast forward to today in January 2025:

Mayor Johnston of Denver, who has now been in office about 1.5 years, announced that the city had completed a deal with Westside Investment Partners to essentially trade this 155-acre plot in the middle of the city, for a 145-acre plot that the city owned near the Denver International Airport. 

The parcel formerly known as Park Hill Golf Course will now become Denver's 4th largest public park. It remains to be seen what the parcel by the airport now owned by the developers will become.

Now what?

This is the first time I've heard of such a thing as a land swap, especially between a municipality and a private entity. Does anyone else have examples of this happening in the past in other places? If so what were the circumstances and what was the reasoning?

For those more entrenched in the Denver development market than I am, is this a fair trade for the city and for the developers? Or did one side clearly come out a winner? 

My initial thought is that the developers may have gotten a much better deal than they would have otherwise given the clear limitations on the land's use. Who else would have bought this land from them? And at what nominal price compared to the $24mil they paid in 2019? That being said, I have no idea what the land by the airport is worth or what they will be able to do with it. 

To me the biggest takeaway is that as real estate professionals, we always talk about location, location, location. When this has me thinking that we also need to be talking about zoning, zoning, zoning. Because in this case zoning took a 155 acre piece of real estate with incredibly prime location, and made it only worth at maximum 145 acres miles outside the city.

  • Rene Hosman
  • Most Popular Reply

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    Jay Hinrichs
    #1 All Forums Contributor
    • Lender
    • Lake Oswego OR Summerlin, NV
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    Jay Hinrichs
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    Replied
    Quote from @Rene Hosman:
    Quote from @Chris Seveney:
    Quote from @Rene Hosman:

    Where are my Denverites at?! 

    This is the first time I've heard of a city or municipality doing something like this. I'd love to get takes from folks who have been around the investing & development scene longer than me - The city of Denver announced yesterday that the mayor has coordinated a land swap with a private developer. 

    If you live in or around Denver you've probably heard of the Park Hill golf course - if not, here's a quick rundown

    Background: 

    1. Park Hill Golf Course was owned by a trust, in the wayyy distant past it was previously a dairy farm, but it has been operated as a golf course since the 1930's! Until 2018, when it was closed due to low revenue and high maintenance costs 

    2. In 1997, I don't fully understand why, the City of Denver paid the golf course owners $2mil to rezone this parcel as a "conservation easement" this was extremely restrictive zoning and meant it would essentially be destined to be a golf course for eternity 

    3. After closing the golf course in 2018, the parcel was sold to a developer named Westside Investment Partners (WIP) in 2019 who intended to remove the conservation easement and develop this parcel in a highly sought after neighborhood of Denver

    4. From around 2018, when the golf course closed, until 2021 local residents essentially used this giant open parcel of grassy land right in the city as open space. On most any day you could find people walking dogs, or children playing in the area.

    Starting around 2021 WIP who clearly thought rezoning would be a no-brainer seemingly started to get frustrated with the pushback from the city and residents.

    I can't say for sure what the reasoning was, but the developers at some point around this time put a chainlink fence around the entire property - its 155 acres. They cited insurance reasons, which could very well be true, but many residents felt it as a big "f you" 
    Now folks from outside the community could argue this was an entitled stance from the residents, to feel they had access to this private land when they didn't, and that on the face is certainly true. But it's also true that this had been open space provided to the community for the better part of a century and now it was fenced off with not even a path or sidewalks around most of the perimeter. 

    5. In 2021 there were two competing ballot measures that the citizens of Denver voted on - one measure from open-space advocates that would continue to prevent WIP from developing this parcel, the second measure sponsored by the WIP themselves that would exempt the property from the current zoning restrictions. 
    What in the world would have happened if both completely opposing measures passed?? We still have no idea. And will never find out because the open-space advocates won their measure while the developers measure failed by a whopping 63%

    6. in 2023, two years after losing the first ballot measure, WIP tried AGAIN, and this time they still lost with 58% of the vote against them

    7. This second defeat at the ballot seemingly left WIP with few options, and it was looking like they way overpaid for this land that in it's current legal state could only be used as a golf course or park. 

    Fast forward to today in January 2025:

    Mayor Johnston of Denver, who has now been in office about 1.5 years, announced that the city had completed a deal with Westside Investment Partners to essentially trade this 155-acre plot in the middle of the city, for a 145-acre plot that the city owned near the Denver International Airport. 

    The parcel formerly known as Park Hill Golf Course will now become Denver's 4th largest public park. It remains to be seen what the parcel by the airport now owned by the developers will become.

    Now what?

    This is the first time I've heard of such a thing as a land swap, especially between a municipality and a private entity. Does anyone else have examples of this happening in the past in other places? If so what were the circumstances and what was the reasoning?

    For those more entrenched in the Denver development market than I am, is this a fair trade for the city and for the developers? Or did one side clearly come out a winner? 

    My initial thought is that the developers may have gotten a much better deal than they would have otherwise given the clear limitations on the land's use. Who else would have bought this land from them? And at what nominal price compared to the $24mil they paid in 2019? That being said, I have no idea what the land by the airport is worth or what they will be able to do with it. 

    To me the biggest takeaway is that as real estate professionals, we always talk about location, location, location. When this has me thinking that we also need to be talking about zoning, zoning, zoning. Because in this case zoning took a 155 acre piece of real estate with incredibly prime location, and made it only worth at maximum 145 acres miles outside the city.


     This happens all the time, when I worked in Boston and outside the city in some counties there would be land swaps that occurred. First and foremost you are just reading a newspaper article. There are a lot more things that occur as part of the contract that would be included including valuations for each parcel, specific tax consequences, proffers offered to the city etc. 

    Typically its done for open space or use for community property (ie. fire station location or other county use) and typicaly would assist in increasing tax base. 


     Yeah that all makes sense, and I'm sure there was a ton that happened in the background here for the last 2 years since the vote to re-zone failed a second time. 

    I guess my questions that still remain: 

    Did the city in theory have a lot of leverage in these negotiations after the second failed attempt at rezoning by the developers? 

    In light of that did the developers wind up getting a pretty decent deal out of this after they took a big risk on a property with crazy restrictive zoning and no clear path forward prior to purchase? My guess is this will remain to be seen for some time, and hindsight is always 20/20. Not much has been released about the land that this new park was traded for, but even if that information was out there, not being a developer myself I'm not sure how to quantify if the developer got a "fair" or a "good" deal


    yup very common.  Usually conservation easements come with Huge tax benefits for the party putting the property into a CE.  This is also very good example of jurisdictions that have zoning and annexations that need voter approval its a great way to STOP development.  I am at this writing currently selling a 35 acre tract to a big developer who is converting the local golf course here in Oregon that was zoned Open space.. they have been successful in getting the rezone.. As its not a vote of the peeps if it was would never have happened.. Golf course is a tough business with dwindling  play .. think the rise of Top golf and pickle ball.. :)

    Also if you look at federal forest ownership maps you will see that Huge areas are checker boarded with private ownership . IE one section  6X 6 miles is owned by the US the one next to it is private.. Timber companies and the feds swap these lands all the time in an effort to create large blocks of either gov land or private timber lands. So you will have 3 ownerships 1 us gov  (fed forest)  2. BLM  ( bureau  of land management) 3. Private ownership primarily large timber owners like Warehouser in the PNW  Stimson in Idaho Montana  etc etc.
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    JLH Capital Partners

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