PulteGroup sells stake in Anthem project

Transcription

PulteGroup sells stake in Anthem project
School
Guide
The differences
between Waldorf
and Montessori
12A
Serving Boulder and Broomfield Counties
Volume 31 Issue 1 | Jan. 6-19, 2012
$1
ENERGY
Tim Enwall
“I don’t see
as much
political
leadership
around clean
tech as we’ve
seen the past
six years.”
RETAIL
Kim Campbell
chief information officer,
senior property manager,
Tendril Networks Inc.
Flatiron Crossing
“Colorado is
expected to
be in the Top
10 states for
job growth
this year, and
that will bode
well for retail
as well.”
NATURAL
Selene DeYarus
chief executive,
Best Organics LLC
“We’re one of
the most
consistently
buying
organic
markets in
the U.S., and
we have a
consumer
platform
that’s robust.”
FORECAST 2012
BANKING
Brian Larson
Boulder market
president,
“We have
the capacity
to do more,
but there’s a
lack of incentive to move
forward
… from an
uncertainty
standpoint.”
The Boulder County
TECHNOLOGY
Business Report asked
people in eight key
industries what they
expect in 2012.
Stories begin on 6A.
Stu Stern
“(Migration
to the cloud)
is one of the
few things
in the last 10
years that
will live up to
the hype.”
chief executive,
Gorilla Logic Inc.
Mitch Carson
president,
Longmont United
Hospital
“Hospitals
are trying to
figure out
how to deal
with expected lower
Medicare
reimbursements from
the federal
government.”
COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE
Wheelock Street Capital buys
into Broomfield development
by Michael Davidson
[email protected]
BROOMFIELD — The Anthem
Highland and Anthem Ranch subdivisions, two of the largest residential
developments in the Denver metro
area, were purchased by a New England company last week in an allcash deal property records indicate is
worth more than $27.25 million.
Wheelock Street Capital LLC, a
private real estate investment firm
headquartered in Greenwich, Connecticut, and Boston, Massachusetts,
purchased the developed lots and
undeveloped land in the Broomfield
developments from PulteGroup Inc.
The deal was announced Dec. 29.
Bargain and sale deeds filed with
the Broomfield Recorder’s Office on
➤ See Anthem, 21A
FirstBank Holding Co.
HEALTH CARE
PulteGroup
sells stake
in Anthem
project
RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE
“There’s a
tremendous
amount of
good signs
I don’t think
we had at the
end of 2010.”
“We’re
definitely
past the
bottom and
surging
upward.”
Becky
Scott Franklund
Callan Gamble
Legendary Properties
president,
at Coldwell Banker
Dean Callan and Co.
Residential Brokerage
BCBR file photograph
Anthem is a 1,700-arce master-planned
community between the Northwest Parkway and Colorado Highway 7 in north
Broomfield.
Visit bcbr.com for breaking news
CONTENTS
Forecast 2012
Energy................................6A
Retail..................................6A
Natural...............................6A
Banking..............................7A
Technology........................7A
Health Care........................7A
Real Estate........................8A
Awards......................15A
Bank Notes.................9A
BCBRdaily..................2A
Calendar....................23A
Editorial.....................22A
Eye...............................3A
Internet News...........15A
Leads.........................18A
Nonprofit Network....23A
On the Job................23A
Product Update........13A
Real Estate................20A
LISTS
Internet Service
Providers�����������������������10A
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Jan. 6-19, 2012 Boulder County Business Report | www.bcbr.com
Trada Inc. raises additional $9 million in VC
Editor’s note: The following is a wrap-up
of breaking local business stories published
daily on the Boulder County Business Report’s
website. Sign up for our free BCBRdaily, an all
local e-news report sent to your e-mail each
weekday. Just click on “Register for E-Newsletters” at www.BCBR.com.
by Business Report Staff
[email protected]
BOULDER — Trada Inc., which
develops pay-per-click Internet marketing campaigns, has raised an additional $9 million in financing, according to a document filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
on Friday, Dec. 23.
Two unnamed investors participated in the new financing for Boulder-based Trada, according to the
document. Brad Feld, a principal a
Boulder-based Foundry Group, a
previous investor, referred questions
to company founder Niel Robertson.
Robertson did not respond to phone
calls from the Boulder County Business Report.
Foundry Group and Google Ventures invested $5.75 million in the
company in 2010. Google Ventures
has offices in Mountain View, California; Cambridge, Massachusetts; New
York; and Seattle. Trada has raised
more than $16.9 million so far.
Posted Dec. 27.
Accounting firms merge
BOULDER — Accounting firm
Doty, Lyle and Jones LLC in Boulder
will merge with Anton Collins Mitchell LLP in Denver on Jan. 1.
Doty, Lyle and Jones will be
renamed Anton Collins Mitchell, or
ACM. Staffing in Boulder is expected
to remain the same, said Brooke Hipp,
a spokeswoman for ACM.
in Greeley in October 2010 through
a merger with Watkins & Schommer
Inc.
Services offered by the firm include
benefit plan audits, tax planning and
consulting, estate planning, corporate
assurance services and business consulting services. ACM will celebrate
its 10th anniversary in July 2012.
Posted Dec. 26.
The merger is part ACM’s plan to
build a larger footprint in Colorado,
according to a press statement.
Gary Mitchell will be the managing partner of the merged firms. Rick
Doty and Bill Jones will remain as
partners and will lead the office in
Boulder. Terms of the merger were
not disclosed.
“While ACM has been providing
services to clients in the Boulder area
for the past decade, the addition of our
new Boulder office and the individuals from the DLJ firm is a significant
strategic step forward in our ability
to provide service more quickly and
effectively for those clients,” Mitchell
said in the statement.
ACM has grown from three partners and 24 employees to 17 partners
and directors, and more than 100
employees since 2002. As part of
that growth, ACM opened an office
Revelry acquires apparel firm
BOULDER — Revelry Brands,
a Boulder-based investment firm
focused on providing growth-stage
private equity to businesses in the
natural foods and consumer products categories, acquired Berkeley-based apparel company PACT
Apparel Inc.
The transaction, which closed on
Dec. 21, represents the first acquisition by Revelry Brands since its
founding in 2009. Revelry’s other
investments include Only Natural
Pet Store, Boulder; EVOL Foods,
Boulder; Siggi’s Dairy, New York; and
Data Garden, New York.
“Revelry’s acquisition of PACT
extends our reach into LOHAS (Lifestyles of Health and Sustainability)
consumer categories,” said Brendan
Synnott, founder of Revelry Brands.
“Our unique understanding of the
natural foods consumer coupled
with our experience building strong,
BCBRdaily
growth-oriented teams will allow us
to accelerate growth through new
distribution in the medium-term, and
build an innovative apparel lifestyle
platform in the long-term.”
In the next 18 months, Revelry
will focus on building the PACT
team, new product development and
expanding distribution.
Jason Kibbey and Jeff Denby
founded PACT in 2009. The two
wanted to develop an apparel company with a line of premium organic
cotton basics that offers consumers
sustainably manufactured products
connected to social and environmental causes.
PACT launched its first product
line, organic cotton underwear for
men and women, in 2009. In 2011,
Pact expanded its product line to
include men and women’s T-shirts
and socks. Past nonprofit partners
have included Sierra Club, Oceana
and Citizen Effect.
Posted Dec. 26.
Synergy raises $5.3 million
PLATTEVILLE — Domestic oil
and gas exploration and production
company Synergy Resources Corp.
raised $5.3 million from an overallotment option to purchase the
company’s common stock.
Synergy Resources (NYSE Amex:
➤ See BCBRdaily, 10A
Jan. 6-19, 2012
Boulder County Business Report | www.bcbr.com
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A
Boulder County allows GMO beets, corn
Farmers pay county
$1.6 million to lease
farmland on open space
by Beth Potter
[email protected]
BOULDER — Boulder County commissioners decided last month to allow
some genetically modified organisms to
be grown on open space land owned by
the county and leased to farmers.
Roundup Ready sugar beets and
genetically modified corn will be
allowed to be grown on about 16,000
acres of cropland leased by the county’s
open space department to farmers. The
farmers pay $1.6 million in lease fees to
the county annually, according to Cindy
Domenico, county commissioner.
Six farmers came to the county in
December 2008 to ask for permission
to plant Roundup Ready sugar beets, a
high-value crop. Genetically modified
corn was approved in a similar process
in 2003, Domenico said. In general,
GMO opponents say that the plants
can be dangerous to human health.
GMO proponents say that science
shows such crops are safe, and that
they help farmers get better yields
with fewer chemicals.
“With the corporate world being
involved in our food supply, the reality is, of course they are,” Domenico
said. “We really want to look at how
we re-energize and re-construct the
local ag infrastructure and do marketing that makes us a vibrant part of the
farm-to-table (movement).”
Asked how the group GMO-Free
Boulder felt about Tuesday’s vote,
campaign manager Mary VonBreck
Measuring up
said she’s happy that more people are
aware of the issue. It’s also expected
to be a political issue in upcoming
local elections, with some new county
commissioner candidates running on
a “non-GMO” platform, VonBreck
said. The group is made up people
involved in local businesses as well as
individuals, VonBreck said.
“We have been working on a collaborative effort between county
commissioners and farmers and the
business community that helped to
ease tensions and create a better dialogue,” VonBreck said.
Nap-deprived
tots may be
missing out
Are you of the belief that if you
keep your ankle-biters awake during
the day they won’t keep you awake
at night?
You may want to rethink that strategy.
A new study led by the University of Colorado Boulder could be a
wake-up call for parents of toddlers:
Daytime naps for your kids may be
more important than you think.
THE EYE
Michael Myers
The Booth Company was founded by Daniel Booth in 1972, but in 2010 two longtime employees — Derek Murphy and Tom Kuhne
— bought the company. Murphy, left, is president and chief executive, and Kuhne is vice president and chief technology officer of the
Boulder-based leadership development company.
Former college roommates become business partners
by Elizabeth Gold
[email protected]
BOULDER — Imagine sinking
thousands of dollars into upgrading all the windows in your house
rather than evaluating your needs
and how well the current windows
are meeting them.
In many cases, that’s the model
organizations follow when it comes
to leadership development.
To counteract the shotgun
approach to training, The Booth
Company, based in Boulder, focuses on measuring management and
team competencies in relation to
specific skills an organization iden-
tifies as necessary.
Although the company has operated since 1972 under the leadership of founder Daniel Booth, two
longtime employees — Derek Murphy and Tom Kuhne — bought the
company in 2010.
Murphy and Kuhne met in a
freshman dormitor y room at
Salisbury University in Maryland,
became friends throughout college.
After graduation they decided to
move to Boulder because of the
mountains, where they landed jobs
at The Booth Company.
“I guess you could say we both
really lucked out, especially with all
the horror stories you typically hear
about college roommates, Murphy
recalled. “Not often are you able to
meet your future business partner
in a college dorm.”
Now, 15 years later, the goal is
to move the business forward with
more of an emphasis on marketing
and incentives, like payment plans
and volume discounts to reach and
retain clients.
“As a small business trying to
grow in a down economy, we’ve
positioned our products in different
ways and work with companies to fit
their budgets,” Kuhne said.
“A challenge has been to make
sure we’re disciplined enough to
➤ See Measuring, 23A
The study shows toddlers between
2 and a half and 3 years old who miss
only a single daily nap show more
anxiety, less joy and interest and a
poorer understanding of how to solve
problems, said CU-Boulder assistant
professor Monique LeBourgeois, who
led the study.
The results indicate insufficient
sleep alters the facial expressions
of toddlers — exciting events are
responded to less positively and frustrating events are responded to more
negatively, she said.
“A sleepy child in a classroom or
day-care environment may not be able
to engage with others and benefit from
positive interactions,” she said. “Their
coping skills decrease and they may be
more prone to tantrums or frustration,
which would affect how other children
and adults interact with them.
This study shows insufficient sleep
in the form of missing a nap taxes the
way toddlers express different feelings, and, over time, may shape their
developing emotional brains and put
them at risk for lifelong, mood-related
problems.”
The Eye wonders if this applies to
everyone.
Could a siesta after lunch remove
that grumpy face and fix the surly
demeanor of the co-worker in the
next cubicle? Or is it too late for a
daily dose of shut-eye?
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Jan. 6-19, 2012 Boulder County Business Report | www.bcbr.com
Study shows rail cost at $1.4 billion
by Doug Storum
[email protected]
acm opens office in boulder, colorado
doty, lyle and jones, llc
has combined their practice with acm
to become acm’s boulder office.
Same People.
LOUISVILLE - After preliminary evaluations by the Burlington
Northern Sante Fe Railway Co., the
cost to complete the Northwest Rail
from South Westminster Station to
Longmont has increased from RTD’s
2011 estimate of $894.4 million to
$1.4 billion.
The new cost is based on a 2020
completion date, although the Regional
Transportation District overseeing the
project expects schedule delays due to
the cost increase of the line, according
to Louisville-based 36 Community
Solutions, a nonprofit organization.
dedicated to reducing congestion and
providing clean commuting options
Leadership program seeks applicants
Same Place.
By Beth Potter
[email protected]
Greater Depth.
bill jones
rick doty
Boulder
303.440.0399
Denver
303.830.1120
www.acmllp.com
along the U.S. 36 corridor.
RTD will be meeting with stakeholders and will revise the financial
plan and implementation schedule
for the line.
BNSF added elements to the project including:
Increased right-of-way for double
tracking, additional set-out tracks
(sidings) and sound walls.
Increased cost of environmental
mitigation and utility relocation.
Upfront charge for operations and
maintenance costs.
BNSF also evaluated two operating
scenarios: one with all-day service
and the other with peak-hour only
service. The estimate RTD received
from BNSF was for all-day service and
RTD is committed to this service.
Northern Colorado
970.352.1700
BOULDER — The Leadership
Boulder County program is looking
for leaders.
The annual Boulder Chamber program is designed to teach business leaders more about the community where
they live and work. The program’s 11
sessions are held every other week on
Wednesday mornings starting Wednesday, Jan. 18, and wrapping up in June.
Participants this year will meet
with local politicians and a newspaper
editor and will tour the jail, among
other activities. They’ll also complete
a community project to help a local
nonprofit group. Classes will be held
at the Boulder Chamber, 2440 Pearl
St., in Boulder.
Up to 40 applicants will be accepted to the program. Applicants must be
Boulder Chamber members. Tuition
is $795 and must be paid in advance.
Program sponsors include Anthem
Blue Cross Blue Shield, Micro Motion
Inc. and the Daily Camera. Contact
Jan Berg at the Boulder Chamber to
ask questions and to apply at: 303442-1044, ext. 109, or jan.berg@
boulderchamber.com.
Nominations sought for Hall of Fame
by Business Report Staff
[email protected]
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LONGMONT — The Boulder
County Business Hall of Fame is seeking nominations for its class of 2012.
The Hall of Fame honors individuals
who have been instrumental, through
business-related efforts, in providing
direction, energy and support to the
shaping of Boulder County.
That honor has been bestowed on
more than 150 individuals since the
program’s inception in 1993.
Nominations are being accepted
at www.halloffamebiz.com, through
an online form, or a form that can be
downloaded, completed and mailed.
Nominees will be evaluated based
on favorable impact on the community,
notable business innovations, corporate
philanthropic activities, personal involvement in such activities, business and civic
achievements and other criteria.
The deadline for nominations this
year is Jan 10.
Inductees will be selected by the
board of the Hall of Fame. A cocktail
reception for new and past inductees
is scheduled for March 21, with the
awards luncheon slated for April 25.
Both events will take place at the
Plaza Hotel in Longmont.
To become a sponsor of the 2012
Boulder County Business Hall of
Fame program, contact Kevin Loewen
at 303-630-1945 or email kloewen@
bcbr.com.
Volume 31 : Issue 1
Jan. 6-19, 2012
Copyright 2012. BizWest Media LLC.
Reproduction or use of editorial or graphic content without written permission is prohibited.
The Boulder County Business Report (USPS 018-522, ISSN 1528-6320)
Is published biweekly, with an extra issue in December, by BizWest Media LLC, a Colorado
corporation, 3180 Sterling Circle, Suite 201,Boulder Colorado, 80301-2338.
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(303) 440-4950 Fax: (303) 440-8954 E-mail:[email protected] Web: www.BCBR.com
Jan. 6-19, 2012
Boulder County Business Report | www.bcbr.com
Boulder Valley stocks
Here is a list of the 11 companies based in Boulder or Broomfield counties
publically traded on the major stock exchanges.
Company
Exchange-
Symbol
Nasdaq: ABIO
Jan. 3, 2011
Arca Biopharma Inc.
$3.15
Broomfield
Array Biopharma Inc.
Nasdaq: ARRY
$3.06
Boulder
Ball Corp.
NYSE: BLL
$34.28
Broomfield
Clovis Oncology Inc.*
Nasdaq: CLVS
$12.56
Boulder
Crocs Inc.
Nasdaq: CROX
$17.54
Niwot
Digital Globe Inc.
NYSE: DGI
$31.18
Longmont
Dynamic Materials Corp.
Nasdaq: BOOM
$22.71
Boulder
Gaiam Inc.
Nasdaq: GAIA
$7.67
Louisville
Level 3 Communications Inc.** NYSE: LVLT
$1.04/$15.60
Broomfield
New Frontier Media Inc.
Nasdaq: NOOF
$4.75
Boulder
Vail Resorts Inc.
NYSE: MTN
$51.89
Broomfield
Dec. 30, 2011
52-week range
$1.00
$0.95-$3.34
$2.16
$1.58-$3.41
$35.71
$29.69 -$40.56
$14.27
$11.45-$14.85
$14.57
$14.20 -$32.47
$17.11
$13.59-$32.82
$19.74
$14.00-$29.69
$3.24
$2.95-$7.95
$16.99
$14.70-$40.05
$1.03
$0.84-$2.18
$42.36
$34.54-$53.38
* Initial public offering Nov. 16, 2011
** 1:15 stock split Oct. 20, 2011
Eight of 11 area firms’
stock prices fell in ’11
Group fared worse than major stock indexes
by Doug Storum
[email protected]
BOULDER — Stocks of most of
the publicly traded companies based
in the Boulder Valley declined in
2011, and as a group, fared worse than
the three major U.S. stock indexes.
Only three of the 11 companies that
call either Boulder or Broomfield counties home ended the year with improved
stock prices: Established firms Ball
Corp. and Level 3 Communications
Inc. in Broomfield and Clovis Oncology
Inc. in Boulder, a young company that
has been trading only since its initial
public offering in November.
The combined values of stocks of
public companies based in the Boulder Valley declined 17.7 percent from
Jan. 3 to Dec. 30, 2011. The decline
is a sharp contrast to 2010 when the
combined value increased 29.9 percent, and to 2009 when it increased
17.4 percent.
This percentage decline does not
reflect an index, but provides a reasonable snapshot of the performance
of stocks of these local companies.
For the year, the Dow Jones gained
5.5 percent, Standard & Poor’s 500
index fell 0.01 percent, and the Nasdaq
recorded a yearly loss of 1.8 percent, the
technology benchmark’s first negative
year in three. The last time the Nasdaq
settled in negative territory at the end
of the year was 2008, when it dropped
approximately 40 percent as the worldwide financial crisis gripped markets.
Telecom giant Level 3 gave itself a
shot in the arm with a 1:15 stock split
in October, helping drive its stock price
as high as $40 per share at the outset,
but it settled at $16.99 per share by
year’s end, a bit higher that its adjusted
Jan. 3 price of $15.60, converted from
$1.04 prior to the split. The company
continued to strike deals for its fiberoptic networks and Internet services,
but it failed to turn a profit through
the first three quarters of 2011.
Beverage can manufacturer Ball
Corp.’s stock price closed the year
on Dec. 30 at $35.71 per share, up
from $34.28 on Jan. 3, 2011. Its stock
ranged from about $30 to $40 per
share during the year.
The company’s performance benefited from strong demand for metal
packaging in China and Brazil, and
improved metal beverage can volumes
in North America, among other things,
according to John A. Hayes, Ball’s president and chief executive officer.
Biotech firm Clovis’ stock climbed
from an IPO price of $12.56 on Nov.
16 to a year-end price of $14.57. Clovis is gearing up for clinical trials for a
drug to treat pancreatic cancer and a
drug to treat small tumors. Clovis also
has licensing and partnership agreements with Pfizer Inc. in New York
and Roche Group, based in Basel,
Switzerland.
Biotech firms Arca Biopharma Inc.
in Broomfield incurred a 68 percent
drop, from $3.15 to $1 per share,
and Array Biopharma Inc. in Boulder
dropped 29 percent, from $3.06 to
➤ See Stocks, 21A
Stay connected with Coloradoʼs Citywide Banks
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Jan. 6-19, 2012 Boulder County Business Report | www.bcbr.com
forecast 2012
Transition period ahead for clean energy
This year looks to be a testing time
for the industries that make up the
clean energy sector, both nationally
and in Boulder.
Tax incentives and changing market conditions suggest 2012 will be a
time of transition and consolidation,
according to industry leaders.
Meanwhile, Boulder’s own energy
future remains unresolved, as the city
continues technical and legal work
that could lead to the creation of a
municipal utility.
“’12 is going to be a much more
interesting year and challenging for
sure,” said J.W. Postal, the senior
vice president of business development and government relations at
Main Street Power Co. The company,
which is headquartered in Boulder,
finances and develops photovoltaic
systems for commercial, utility and
public sector clients.
energy
A government tax credit that helped
the solar industry is going away, and
companies are trying to develop new
ways to finance projects.
The wind energy industry faces
similar uncertainty. The production
tax credit used to finance wind projects it set to expire at the end of
2012.
Whether Congress will extend the
credit or not is a major issue for the
Enwall
Postal
Rucker
wind industry, said Michael Rucker,
juwi Wind LLC’s CEO. Rucker heads
the U.S. wind turbine technology
division of the juwi Group, a German company that develops renewable energy technology. Juwi Wind’s
research center is in Boulder.
The industry needs to know whether the credit will continue before it
can design and develop wind farms
that take a few years to complete,
Rucker said.
Clean tech industries continue
their improvement as support from
Washington disappears, said Tim
Enwall, chief information officer of
Tendril Networks Inc., a Boulderbased company that makes energymanagement software.
“I don’t see as much political leadership around clean tech as we’ve seen
the past six years,” Enwall said.
Voters in November narrowly gave
the city permission to form a municipally owned electric company. City
staff and outside experts continue to
study whether a utility is viable, how it
would work and how it would acquire
assets from Xcel Energy Inc., the
city’s current electricity provider.
— Michael Davidson
Retailers expecting growth in coming year
Retail sales are expected to
increase 2 percent to 3 percent across
Boulder and Broomfield counties in
2012, and across the state, according
to Christopher Howes, president
of the Colorado Retail Council, an
industry trade group in Denver.
Such a gain sounds pretty good,
given the lackluster economy of the
last few years, until you take inflation into account, Howes said. That
means that 2012 may be a make-orbreak year for retailers to convince
shoppers to continue to use stores
rather than buy online, he said.
FlatIron Crossing in Broomfield
had an “excellent” 2011, and expects
to build on that momentum in 2012,
said Kim Campbell, the mall’s senior
property manager. FlatIron Crossing and the Twenty Ninth Street
retail district in Boulder were both
developed and are managed by Mac-
erich Co., a Santa Monica, California-based retail developer (NYSE:
MAC).
“Colorado is expected to be in
the Top 10 states for job growth this
year, and that will bode well for retail
as well,” Campbell said.
BOULDER — The natural and
organic products industry in the
Boulder Valley is expected to do well
in 2012.
An estimated $1.5 billion is
pumped into the regional economy
by natural and organic industry companies and their estimated 7,000
or so employees, said Steve Hoffman, managing partner of industry
marketing firm Compass Natural,
quoting a recent survey done by the
CU-Leeds School of Business on the
industry.
Lending to the local natural and
organic food sector is expected to
rise in 2012, according to Toby Leonard, business banking vice president
at Great Western Bank’s Boulder
office.
Boulder County customers will
continue to be a unique factor driving the industry in 2012, said Selene
DeYarus, chief executive officer of
Best Organics LLC in Boulder, an
organic gift basket company. Her
company’s sales were up 30 percent
for the Christmas season over the
same period the year before, DeYarus
said, without giving specific dollar
amounts.
Retail
In Broomfield, new retail leases
and some “new-to-market” retailers
are expected to announce they’re
coming in the first and second quarters of 2012, said Bo Martinez, director of economic development for the
city and county of Broomfield. Area
developers seem to be cautiously
optimistic about 2012, he said.
One question mark is the existing
Target store at 1660 West Midway
Boulevard, which will close at the
IN BROOMFIELD
new retail leases and
Campbell
Maher
Martinez
end of the shopping day on Jan. 28.
Real estate brokers already have been
calling about the centrally located
building, which is on the market for
$3.75 million, Martinez said.
Downtown Boulder expects to
see stronger retail growth in 2012,
according to Sean Maher, executive
director of Downtown Boulder Inc.
New and stronger tenants have
taken virtually all of the spaces on
the Pearl Street Mall vacated by
struggling retailers and restaurants,
Maher said. Ongoing hotel occupancy in downtown Boulder is the high-
some “new-to-market”
retailers are expected to
announce they’re coming
in the first and second
quarters of 2012.
est it has ever been, he said. And East
Pearl Street in the blocks near the
walking mall has seen a resurgence
of shopping and restaurants. “There’s
very little vacancy downtown, and
for 2012, we’ll see modest growth,”
Maher said.
— Beth Potter
Gluten-free, omega-3 products gain traction
Natural
“We’re one of the most consistently buying organic markets in the
United States, and we obviously have
a consumer platform that’s robust,”
DeYarus said. “Add to that the entrepreneurial attraction to the natural
and organic industry, and it makes
us very unique in the United States
from other communities.”
Some natural and organic food
trends are expected to grow bigger
in 2012, said Bill Capsalis, a program
manager at the Boulder Innovation
An estimated
$1.5 billion is pumped
into the regional
Capsalis
DeYarus
Tuitele
Center business incubator in Boulder and founder of MarkEnomics, a
brand consulting firm.
Heart-healthy omega-3 fatty acids
will be added to more natural and
organic products, more gluten-free
food options will be available, and
more frozen natural and organic
food choices may make their way to
store freezers, Capsalis said. Natural
and organic foods targeted at children and industry products for pets
also will be big in 2012, Capsalis
believes.
Anything made with coconut also
will become more popular in 2012,
economy by natural
and organic industry
companies and their
estimated 7,000 or
so employees
said Sonja Tuitele, a spokeswoman
for Aurora Organic Dairy and for
Alfalfa’s Market, both Boulder companies. Products such as coconut
water and coconut sugar will become
even more popular with consumers,
she said.
— Beth Potter
Jan. 6-19, 2012
Boulder County Business Report | www.bcbr.com
|
A
forecast 2012
Bankers predict they will increase lending
BOULDER — Bankers in the
Boulder Valley are generally optimistic about 2012.
Some of the region’s biggest banks
and its busiest credit union plan to
lend more money to both commercial
and residential customers in 2012
than they did in 2011.
Bankers also see an increased interest in construction — often a leading
indicator in how the commercial real
estate may fare in upcoming months.
Several also expect to see growth from
existing small-business customers.
“A sizeable number of companies
are poised for good things,” said Bill
Farrell, Wells Fargo’s Boulder market
president. “We have great customers
who continue to do well within the
various sectors.”
Elevations Credit Union in Boulder
plans to increase the dollar volume of
home loans by one-third in 2012, said
Gerry Agnes, Elevations’ president.
“While the mortgage origination mar-
banking
ket is going to shrink nationally by
about a third, we are going to expand
roughly by about a third”
Brewery expansions may lead the
charge among local businesses that
are growing, said Toby Leonard, business banking vice president at Great
Western Bank’s office in Boulder. Local
companies in other industry sectors
are expected to follow suit, Leonard
said. “With smaller, local businesses,
some of them are expanding to take
advantage where competitors may have
Agnes
Farrell
Larson
gone away. They’re acquiring additional
space and adding new products.”
The local market appears stable
for businesses, but uncertainty about
the national economy continues to
play a major role in decision-making,
said Brian Larson, market president
in Boulder for FirstBank Holding Co.
of Lakewood. Larson oversees eight
locations in the Boulder area.
“We have the capacity to do more,
but there’s a lack of incentive to move
forward when so many things are fac-
ing (businesses) from an uncertainty
standpoint,” Larson said. “We’re still
pretty optimistic about 2012.”
Larry Martin, a banking analyst and
owner of Bank Strategies LLC in Denver, said to expect uncertainty in the
national economy to potentially affect
banks across the state in 2012. A few
more banks in Colorado are expected
to fail in 2012, Martin said.
Uncertainty about what’s going
to happen in the national economy
also is expected to put more general
pressure on bank earnings in 2012,
Martin said, meaning that banks may
see lower profit margins. At the same
time, companies and individuals are
expected to have more leverage to
negotiate good interest rates for their
loans as a result, Martin said.
— Beth Potter
Shift to cloud, smartphones lead tech sector
The growing power and use of
smartphones and the shift to the
cloud will continue to drive the technology industry in 2012, and their
effect on businesses outside the tech
world will continue to be felt.
Applicat ions t hat allow for
“hyperlocal” targeting of information
are improving, said Robert Reich,
organizer of the Boulder-Denver
New Tech Meetup and founder of
the OpenSpace Store Inc., a market
for mobile apps.
The increasing capabilities of
hyperlocal apps will shape how previously low-tech businesses relate to
consumers and let them know what’s
working and what’s not.
“It’s affecting retail, restaurants,
spas. We’re seeing it in all different
areas,” Reich said.
Retailers and programmers also
are working on ways to turn smartphones into virtual wallets, allowing
users to digitally pay for purchases
they make while in brick-and-mortar stores. Ironing out the kinks of
mobile payment platforms and mak-
technology
ing sure they are secure will keep
plenty of programmers busy, said
John Basso, chief information officer
of Boulder-based Amadeus Consulting Group Inc.
The year should also bring new
advances for voice recognition software, said Stu Stern, chief executive
of Gorilla Logic Inc., a software
development and consulting com-
Basso
Reich
Stern
pany in Boulder. The incorporation
of Siri, a voice-based interface, on
the latest iPhone is a sign of the
technology’s growing power.
The migration of computer functions to the cloud will continue, and
it won’t be limited to data storage.
More business critical apps will be
hosted on the cloud, which will be a
profound change for the tech industry and companies that use enterprise software.
“It’s one of the few things in the
last 10 years that will live up to the
hype,” Stern said of the transition.
Perhaps the best news is that
local tech companies are hungry
for talent. At each of the past few
New Tech Meetups, companies
sent representatives recruiting to
fill more than 100 job openings,
Reich said.
There is “unbelievable demand”
for user interface and user experience designers. Programmers familiar with HTML 5 also are hot, Reich
said.
But the openings aren’t only limited to engineers and coders. Sales,
marketing and operations positions
are needed, which is a sign local
startups are maturing and scaling up,
Reich said.
— Michael Davidson
Supreme Court likely to rule on health care
Change may be the best word to
describe what’s expected in the local
health-care industry in 2012, according
to area hospital and clinic executives.
At least two national health-care
policy decisions expected to affect
Boulder Valley residents may be made
in the next several months, according
to local industry executives.
No. 1: The Supreme Court is slated to discuss in March whether or not
the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act passed in 2009 is constitutional or not, said Mitch Carson,
president and chief executive officer
of Longmont United Hospital.
Supreme Court judges are expected to decide whether the federal
government can regulate the insurance industry, which traditionally was
regulated by individual states. Right
now, all states, including Colorado,
are required by the new law to cre-
ate new health benefits exchanges
— Internet marketplaces where individual customers and small businesses
will be able to purchase health insurance at reduced or subsidized prices.
States are required to build the online
“exchanges” by 2014.
Health care
No. 2: Hospitals are trying to figure
out how to deal with expected lower
Medicare reimbursements from the
federal government in 2012, Carson
said. As the federal deficit has grown,
the Medicare reimbursement issue
has gotten more attention, Carson
said.
“It’s significant — both the changes in reimbursement and health-care
reform,” Carson said.
John Sackett, chief executive at
At least two national
health-care policy decisions expected to affect
Carson
Hamm
Sacket
Avista Adventist Hospital in Louisville, believes that if the Supreme
Court rules that the Affordable Care
Act is unconstitutional, consumers
will pay more for health insurance.
Insurance and federal Medicare
reimbursement also is at the top of
the list of 2012 health-care issues
for Dave Hamm, president and chief
executive officer at Exempla Good
Samaritan Medical Center in Lafayette.
Boulder Community Hospital will
focus on continued development at
the Foothills campus on the north-
Boulder Valley residents
may be made in the next
several months, according
to local industry executives.
east corner of Arapahoe Avenue and
Foothills Parkway in 2012, said Rich
Sheehan, a hospital spokesman. The
hospital is adding 100,000 square
feet to its existing building at the
Foothills campus and is building the
new 46,000 square foot Anderson
Medical Center.
— Beth Potter
A
|
Jan. 6-19, 2012 Boulder County Business Report | www.bcbr.com
forecast 2012
Commercial real estate market gains steam
The commercial real estate market looks set for a solid year in 2012,
as local job growth and easier access
to credit boost the industry, according to local commercial real estate
experts.
The demand for space, especially
office space downtown, will continue
to grow, and rental rates have stabilized or started increasing.
The gains will continue thanks to
trends that began in the second half
of 2011, said Stephen Tebo, owner of
Tebo Development Co., who has one
of Boulder County’s largest commercial property portfolios.
“If the last quarter is any indication, it will be a stellar year,” Tebo
said. November was one of the best
months his company has had in terms
of new lease activity.
“There’s a tremendous amount
of good signs I don’t think we had at
the end of 2010,” said Becky Callan
Gamble, president of the commercial
brokerage firm Dean Callan and Co.
The “organic growth” of local com-
panies or large companies with local
offices is the major factor, Gamble
said, and its impact is being felt across
the board and in submarkets outside
of downtown Boulder that have been
lagging the past few years.
Finding space will be an increasing
COMMERCIAL
real estate
challenge in 2012.
“We’re getting calls from a lot of
companies that we don’t have space
for,” Freeman Myre Inc. president
Andrew Freeman said. Large companies “want blocks of space that really
don’t exist in Boulder,” he said.
Tebo said the problem extends to
his company’s clients that have outgrown their current locations.
Whether that will lead to new
projects being built or major redevelopment of existing properties is to be
determined. Banks are lending again,
but money still is not available for
The demand for
space, especially office
space downtown, will
Freeman
Gamble
Tebo
continue to grow, and
spec projects, Tebo said.
Freeman said more investors are
looking at acquiring land, mentioning
an increase in interest in the Colorado
Technology Center in Louisville.
Sales activity has picked up and
likely will continue as long as interest rates remain low, Tebo said. Tebo
Development has acquired many distressed properties in Boulder County
and elsewhere in 2011 and will continue to pursue that strategy, Tebo
said.
Whether newcomers will make
major plays in the Boulder market
remains to be seen. Goff Capital Partners, a national real estate investment
firm with an office in Greenwood
Village, spent $67.9 million to buy 19
rental rates have stabilized
or started increasing.
buildings in the Flatiron Park business
park, but deals that big are rare for
Boulder because the few owners of
portfolios that large rarely look to sell,
Gamble said.
The infusion of new blood into the
market will be a good thing, Gamble
said. Dean Callan and Co. and Grubb
& Ellis Co. will be the listing brokers
for Flatiron Park.
“It has a tendency to get everyone
excited and adds a new energy,” she
said.
– Michael Davidson
Positive signs indicate rally for home market
The improving local economy
and historically low interest rates
bode well for the local residential
real estate market at the start of
2012, according to local real estate
experts.
Pent-up buyer demand plus an
increase in the number of buyers
interested in purchasing homes in the
Boulder Valley suggest the market is
becoming more favorable to sellers
and that prices are stabilizing.
“I think were going to see a positive year,” said Ken Hotard, senior
vice president of public affairs for the
Boulder Area Realtors Association.
“We’re definitely past the bottom and surging upward,” said Scott
Franklund of Legendary Properties at
Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage.
Diminishing supply of available
homes is one factor that could lead
to price stabilization and a healthy
market, Franklund said.
“There are significantly fewer
homes on the market for sale today,”
Franklund said.
That could change this year, as
homeowners who have been waiting
for the right time to sell might make
residential
real estate
their moves.
“I think a lot of people have been
holding back who otherwise have
been interested in selling,” Hotard
said.
A lack of new construction also
will increase prices and boost the
market, Franklund said.
Potential buyers continue looking
for homes.
“We’re seeing a lot of pent-up
buyer demand,” said Risé Staufer,
Pent-up buyer
demand plus an increase
in the number of buyers
Franklund
Hotard
interested in purchasing
Staufer
broker/owner of Stuafer Team Real
Estate, a Louisville-based firm, and
BARA president.
“There’s no question there are
more buyers coming into the market
every week and every month,” Hotard
said.
The good news isn’t just for the
sellers. Potential buyers will get a
boost as interest rates are expected to
remain low for 2012.
Banks also are lending again and
making mortgages available to qualified buyers, Hotard said.
While the recovery seems strong,
it is largely dependent on the health
homes in the Boulder
Valley suggest the market
is becoming more favorable
to sellers and that prices
are stabilizing.
of the local economy. Continued
employment growth is the major
indicator to watch, Franklund said.
“If Boulder continues to create
high-end jobs, we will continue to sell
homes,” he said.
— Michael Davidson
L ongmont P ower & C ommuniCations — H onoring a C entury of P ubLiC P ower
Power Points
100 years ago,
the citizens of Longmont had the foresight to create a municipal electric utility for the
community’s benefit. To get it started, 63 citizens contributed $1,000 each to help finance the infrastructure.
Today,
that bold decision continues to benefit Longmont businesses:
• Rates: LPC would need to raise its business rates nearly 47% to reach the state average
• Service: Local utility staff provides responsive, high quality customer service
• Reliability: LPC is a three time national award winner of the American Public Power Association’s
RP3 award for reliability, safety and system improvements
• Technology: State of the art technologies, including an optical fiber network, improve system
reliability and efficiency
Powering up for the next 100 years
http://www.ci.longmont.co.us/lpc
Longmont Power
& Communications
Local • Reliable • Affordable
Jan. 6-19, 2012
Boulder County Business Report | www.bcbr.com
|
A
Put a little extra cha-ching in your step
I
t’s always fun to figure out easy
ways to get more money in your
pocket.
So, for the new year, I decided
to ask area financial planners for their
favorite wealth-building tips. What I
heard were some obvious and some
not-so-obvious ways to put a little
extra cha-ching in your step in the
next 12 months.
Here are 10 ways to get more from
your personal money management
strategies in 2012.
1. If your New Year’s resolution
is to save more money, have a set
amount deducted directly from your
paycheck, said Peter Braun, first vice
president, investments, and a wealth
adviser at UBS Financial Services
Boulder office. The more specific
you are about your financial goals,
the more likely you are to actually
save the dough. It may sound like a
no-brainer, but you’d be surprised
how few people actually do it.
2. Related: Make a budget for all
household expenditures, said Nancy
Stevens, chairman of First Western Trust Bank, a Boulder wealthmanagement firm. Most people can
reduce spending by about 15 percent,
simply by knowing how much or
little they want to spend on things
like eating out, buying groceries, or
going on vacation, she said.
“For most people, these are the
easy places to find savings,” Stevens
said. “Our experience is that people
actually enjoy keeping track of their
monthly spending and seeing their
savings accumulate.”
3. Still related : Pay dow n
or pay of f a s
much of your
per sona l debt
as you can. Pay
off your credit
cards. As Braun
puts it, “People
who understand
bank notes
interest, earn it.
Beth Potter
People who don’t
understand, pay it.”
The less debt you keep on your
personal balance sheet, and the less
debt you take on in the future, the
better shape you’ll be in for the long
haul, Braun said.
4. Have any money left over after
those belt-tightening tips? You still
have time to contribute to your individual retirement account, or IRA,
– through April 15 for the 2011
tax year. Anyone under age 50 can
contribute $5,000 per year; if you’re
older, you can contribute $6,000
per year.
5. Convert your IRA account into
a Roth IRA, which is tax-free. Doing
so often produces better long-term
results for you and your beneficiaries,
according to Dave Cerullo, a certified public accountant at First Western Trust Bank. Weigh the potential
future benefits carefully before you
take the plunge, however – the conversion will increase your adjusted
gross income on your tax form for
2011.
6. Increase the amount you contribute to your 401(k) retirement
plan at work. For 2012, the maximum contribution to a 401(k) plan
increases from $16,500 to $17,000,
Stevens said. If you’re 50 or older,
you can contribute another $5,500
to your 401(k), or a total of $22,500
before any employer match.
In addition, many companies now
offer a Roth 401(k) option, which
taxes the employee’s contribution
when it is made, but grows taxfree until retirement, Cerullo said.
Withdrawals after retirement also
are tax-free. A Roth 401(k) option
may seem particularly attractive for
younger employees in lower income
tax brackets who expect their earnings to grow in the future, Cerullo
said.
7. If you have kids, you can put
money away tax-free for their education. Such 529 plans are tax deferred
as they grow and tax-free if used for
qualified educational expenses.
8. When it comes to charitable
contributions, you can actually
donate stocks you own to charity
instead of cash. If you donate stocks
to a charitable organization, you can
deduct the fair market value of the
long-term capital gain property at
tax time, even though your actual
stock might be worth significantly
less, Cerullo said. Donating stocks
also help you also avoid taxes on
the gain that would be recognized
if you sold the security and donated
the proceeds.
9. Related: It’s too late now to
do this for 2011, but think about
annual exclusion gifts before yearend 2012. In 2011, the amount a
person could give away to family
and friends before paying any gift
tax was $13,000 per person. Families working on wealth management
strategies for their kids can benefit
big from such gifts, if they’re able to
plan carefully.
10. Consult your tax adviser to
look for any potential tax benefits
you may have missed from your
changing financial situation over
the last year. Buying and selling
real estate, changing jobs, moving, adding or subtracting money
from retirement accounts and other
life changes all can affect your tax
liability.
Beth Potter can be reached at 303-6301944 or e-mail [email protected].
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10A
|
Jan. 6-19, 2012 business report
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from 2A
SYRG) based in Platteville, northeast
of Longmont, offered an additional
1,909,090 shares of common stock
at a price of $2.75 per share to raise
the new money from firms managing
the transaction, according to a press
statement.
The company last week said it
had raised about $32.6 million in
a stock offering to firms managing
the transaction, including Northland
Capital Markets in Minneapolis, Minnesota, C. K. Cooper & Co. in Irvine,
California, and GVC Capital LLC in
Greenwood Village.
Synergy Resources plans to use
net proceeds from its stock offering
to develop and drill wells in the Wattenberg Field in Northern Colorado,
the company said. The stock offering
was recorded with the Securities and
Exchange Commission.
Synergy Resources said in September that it had increased oil production
to about 1,000 barrels of oil equivalent
per day. In general, the company said
it focuses on gas wells in the DenverJulesburg Basin in Colorado, Wyoming, Kansas and Nebraska.
Posted Dec. 28.
Area wages above average
BOULDER — Workers in the
Boulder Valley make about 20 percent more per hour than the national
average, according to data from the
Occupational Employment Statistics
survey published Wednesday by the
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
The average hourly wage for workers in the Boulder metropolitan statistical area, which includes Boulder
and Longmont, was $25.65 during
May 2010, when the survey was conducted, compared with the national
average of $21.35.
According to the survey, workers
in the Fort Collins-Loveland metropolitan statistical area averaged
$21.20 per hour, and workers in the
Greeley metropolitan statistical area
averaged $19.68 per hour.
The OES survey provides employment and wage estimates for wage
and salary workers in 22 major occupational groups and more than 375
occupations in the Boulder metropolitan area. When compared with
the nationwide distribution, employment in Boulder was more highly
concentrated in seven of the 22 occupational groups, including computer
and mathematical; architecture and
engineering; and life, physical and
social sciences.
Wages of workers in the Boulder
Valley for the major occupational
groups ranged from $10.98 per hour
in food preparation and serving related jobs to $57.64 in management.
Fourteen occupational groups had
significantly higher wages than their
respective national averages, including life, physical and social sciences;
sales and health-care support.
Posted Dec. 28.
Avista opens center in Erie
ERIE — Avista Adventist Hospital
has opened a new family practice
medical center in the Coal Creek
Center in Erie.
Family physician Chris Watson
will head the center at 611 Mitchell
Way, which is at the intersection of
Erie Parkway and County Line Road.
Phone is 303-469-2780.
The 4,875-square-foot office
includes nine exam rooms, according to a press statement from The
Colorado Group, the commercial
brokerage in Boulder involved in the
transaction. Avista Adventist Hospital is in Louisville.
“This new facility represents a significant addition to medical services
available in the Town of Erie and the
surrounding area,” said Craig Ockers,
The Colorado Group’s leasing broker
in the transaction.
Phil Irwin manages the building.
He represented the ownership group
in the lease transaction.
Posted Jan. 2.
Accera names Kunze CEO
BROOMFIELD — Accera Inc.,
a developer of therapeutic treat-
ments for neurodegenerative diseases,
appointed Holger Kunze as chief
executive and member of the company’s board of directors.
Kunze replaces Claude Nash who
became chairman of the company’s
board of directors.
Kunze has more than 30 years
experience with multinational pharmaceutical and nutrition companies,
most recently as regional business
unit head for Nestle Health Science’s
HealthCare in the Africa, Oceania
and Asia territories.
Before working at Nestle, Kunze
was a regional manager for Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corp. During
his 10-year tenure with Novartis,
Kunze established the Asia regional
medical nutrition office in Singapore
and managed the medical nutrition
business for Novartis in 17 Asian
countries.
“I am thrilled to have the opportunity to add to Accera’s efforts of
providing Alzheimer’s patients with
an alternative for managing their disease,” Kunze said. “I’m confident that
with my experience, we’ll be able to
further expand the commercial presence of Axona in global markets.”
Axona is a prescription-only medical food intended for clinical dietary
management of mild to moderate
Alzheimer’s disease.
Posted Jan. 3.
Jan. 6-19, 2012
Boulder County Business Report | www.bcbr.com
|
11A
Consider hedging company stocks/options
L
ife gets in the way of your best
intentions. As a busy executive, work and family usually
are your highest priorities,
while portfolio management gets left
to a few moments on weekends and
evenings.
Owning company stock and/or
options throws an extra challenge
into the mix. Overconfidence can lead
to an underestimation of the real risk
of these investments. Since you work
for the company you feel that you will
be able to tell in advance when to get
out of the stock, even though you are
not supposed to.
But trying to find the best strategies
to hedge or dispose of your company
stock and options can be a daunting task.
Hedging your company stock requires
skill and persistence and knowledge of
sophisticated techniques.
The most common strategy is to
create a collar on the stock, establishing a ceiling and floor to which the
stock can’t go above or below. To do
this, you purchase a put option on the
stock and sell a call option.
For this example, we’ll assume
you own 10,000 shares of stock XYZ
and the price is $50 per share and
your cost basis is $25 per share. First,
figure the option expiration date you
should use to hedge your stock. Typically, option expirations run in threemonth cycles, so options would expire
in three, six or nine months, or one-
year time frames with some options
expiring in as long as two years.
If it’s a six-month expiration, you
would purchase a put option that
expires in six months and sell a call
option that expires in six months. Say
you purchase 100 June 40 puts for $4
(one put hedges
10 0 shares, so
100 puts hedge
10,000 shares)
and you simult a neously sel l
10 0 Ju ne 6 0
calls for $4. You
have effectively
Guest opinion h e d g e d y o u r
Robert J. Pyle
stock for no cost
or in other words
have created a zero cost collar.
We also forgot to mention that all
this has to happen simultaneously
otherwise you are exposed to individual company risk. A typical individual
company stock is two- to three-times
more risky that a diversified portfolio
of mutual funds. Now that you are
hedged you have to understand the
mechanics of the hedging. On expiration day which is the third Friday
in June, your stock will be sold if it is
above $60 or below $40 per share.
You might think you are all set, but
other things can occur to derail your
plans. You have muted the range of
outcomes for your company stock to
plus-or-minus 20 percent, or basically
As a busy executive,
work and family usually are
your highest
priorities, while portfolio
management gets left to a
few moments on weekends
and evenings. Owning
company stock and/or
options throws an extra
challenge into the mix.
what you would expect from a diversified portfolio over a six-month period.
Now suppose the stock closes at
$51 per share on the third Friday
in June, then you have to redo the
whole process again by buying 100
December 40 puts and selling 100
December 60 calls. In this case, you
may even make a little money, but no
point should you leave your company
stock unhedged at the risk of the stock
losing more than 20-percent of its
value overnight
Logistically, the continuous hedge
requires a lot of work. For example, if
you chose options that expire on the
third Friday in June and you wait until
the next Monday to re-hedge, you
are exposed to company stock risk all
weekend, which can be unsettling.
What if you are in a blackout period
during the time the options expire
and you can’t rehedge your position?
Or, what if the blackout period lingers
longer than expected leaving your
position unhedged?
Alternatively, you could purchase
the call and sell the put before expiration but this would also result in
another set of transaction costs and
then rehedge with another set of
options all in one day. This will take
time and discipline and also double
your transaction costs.
Other options might include selling some your company stock for
a profit while tax rates are low in
exchange for investments in a diversified portfolio of stock and bond mutual funds around the world. Either
option would likely reduce investment risks and stress, while increasing
free time with your family and doing
the things you love.
Robert J. Pyle is president of Boulderbased Diversified Asset Management
Inc. and an investment adviser registered with the Securities and Exchange
Commission. This column reflects the
writer’s views and is not a recommendation to buy or sell any investment. Pyle
can be reached at 303-440-2906 or via
email at [email protected].
2012 Economic Forecast: Boulder & Beyond
Find out what’s ahead for 2012
Thursday, January 26, 4:00 to 7:30 pm, UCAR Center Green Auditorium
x
Business Economic Outlook—Boulder, Colorado, and US
Ń Dr. Richard Wobbekind, Economist, Leeds School of Business, University of Colorado Boulder
x
Panel discussion—Emerging from the recession: economic challenges and opportunities
Ń Jane Brautigam, City Manager, City of Boulder
Ń Susan Graf, President & CEO, Boulder Chamber
Ń Ric Porreca, Senior Vice Chancellor & Chief Financial Officer, University of Colorado Boulder
Ń Cindy Schmidt, Director of Government Affairs, UCAR and CO-LABS Board member
x
Reception and Networking
$55 pre-registered ($45 Boulder Chamber members)
Seating is limited—register now at www.bouldereconomiccouncil.org/news-events/
Presenting Sponsor
Gold Sponsors
Silver Sponsors
Bronze Sponsors
Media Sponsors
General Sponsors
Boulder Community
Hospital Foundation
Covidien
Xcel Energy
12A
|
Jan. 6-19, 2012 Boulder County Business Report | www.bcbr.com
| bcbr.com
School guide 13A | De Beer settles in at Friends
FOCUS: private schools
Differences in Waldorf, Montessori
Teaching methods
set private schools’
programs apart
by Heather McWilliams
[email protected]
Parents committed to raising
socially, emotionally and academically balanced children — and seeking a school that supports their goal
— often find themselves on the doorstep of Waldorf and Montessori programs. Teasing out the similarities
and differences between the two can
help match the right school to the
right family.
Montessori and Waldorf programs
both tend to a child’s spiritual, mental, physical and psychological development rather than focusing solely
on academic curricula, according to
Susan Mayclin Stephenson on the
website micahelolaf.net.
Both programs strive to shield
children from the pressures of the
modern world, she writes, but how
students are grouped, how instruction is delivered and the pacing or
timing of instruction set the two
methods apart. Shining Mountain
Waldorf School and Jarrow Montessori School, two longstanding Boulder private schools, illustrate these
differences.
At Shining Mountain Waldorf,
a fully accredited Waldorf school
with more than 300 students from
preschool through high school, students are grouped by age, said Jane
Zeender, development director at
Shining Mountain.
“What’s appropriate for a 5-yearold is different than what’s appropriate for a 7-year-old,” Zeender said.
“We really want to meet them at
their developmental level.” A proper
age grouping ensures students receive
age-appropriate instruction.
The Waldorf philosophy also waits
for focused academic instruction
until first grade.
“Kindergarten is all play, imaginative play,” said Sue Levine, school
director for Shining Mountain Waldorf, “Children learn to write in first
grade and then read in second grade,
so it’s a more delayed approach,”
Levine said. Children focused on
imaginative play develop creativity, build a network of family and
friends, and connect with the natural
world before diving into more structured academics.
In an effort to foster outside play,
imagination and strong relationships,
Shining Mountain Waldorf allows
➤ See Differences, 14A
COURTESY jarrow Montessori school
Barb Truan, head of school at Jarrow Montessori in Boulder, seen here with a student, said students self-direct their learning in Montessori,
rather than relying on a teacher to deliver knowledge. Classroom materials promote self-correction and lessen adult interference, she said.
Waldorf vs. Montessori
Curriculum
Founder Rudolph Steiner kept academic subjects
from children in Waldorf schools until a much later
age than Montessori. They are thought to be, as in
traditional schools, something necessary but not
especially enjoyable, and best put off as long as
possible. The day is filled with make-believe, fairies, art, music and generally the arts, putting off
reading, writing and math until age seven or so.
Dr. Maria Montessori on the other hand, filled
her first school of 3- to 6-year-olds with dolls and
other traditional make-believe toys but found that
when children were given the opportunity to do
real work such as cooking, cleaning, caring for
themselves, each other, and the environment, they
completely lost interest in make-believe and preferred real work.
Method
In the early years the activities are most often
taught and carried out in groups with the teacher
leading. When academic subjects are studied they
are taught in a more traditional way, the teacher
talking, the children at desks being taught in a
group. Children are kept together with a group
of children their own age with the teacher ideally
moving up each year with the children and so getting to know and working with the same group of
children for six years. Arts are ideally always a part
of the academic studies.
Social development is more like that of real life
because children are not kept in a group of sameage students, but are grouped in 3-6 year age span
(3-6; 6-12, 12-15). The teacher gives lessons individually to one child at a time, and often lessons are given
to one child by another child. The choice of what to
study or work on at any one time is left to the child,
with guidance whenever necessary by the teacher.
A high level of creativity is reached because the
children’s experience is based on rich experience in
the real world and the exact use of materials.
Fantasy and imagination
In Waldorf philosophy, play is viewed as the work
of the young child and the magic of fantasy, so
alive in the young child, is an integral part of how
the teacher works with the child. The teacher
incorporates storytelling and fantasy into the curriculum. The child can use for the most part any of
the materials in any way.
Source: Susan Mayclin Stephenson
In Montessori fantasy and imagination are very
much a part of the creative process. However,
since the real world is seen as a wonderful creation as it is, children are introduced to the real
world in all is variations in the first six years, and
then use these experiences to create for the rest of
their lives. The word “work” is used to describe the
child’s activities instead of “play” because they are
respected as adult activities.
Jan. 6-19, 2012
Boulder County Business Report | www.bcbr.com
|
13A
De Beer settles in as Friends’ head of school
Publicizing school’s
merits high on list of
things to accomplish
by Michelle LeJeune
[email protected]
Peter Wayne
Steve de Beer took over as head of school at Friends’ School in Boulder at the start of the school year. As de Beer sees it now, part of the job
is as “No. 1 storyteller,” letting the community know what the Friends’ School is about.
ground and experiences, de Beer
speaks in a way that makes it clear
that he is not looking for broken
things to fix at the Friends’ School.
“I’m still trying to understand the
product update
Boulder-based La Sportiva North America will roll
out a new line of ski mountaineering coats, pants and
other clothing in January at three outdoor industry
trade shows. The clothing is for people participating
in backcountry winter ski touring and alpine climbing. La Sportiva will use waterproof Gore-Tex fabric
made by Newark, Delaware-based W.L. Gore and
Associates Inc. in the new products. The clothing
line will be sold at specialty outdoor retail stores. It’s
expected to be made by contract manufacturers in
Europe and Asia.
InspirePay launched an Internet payment tool that
aggregates Internet commerce choices such as
PayPal, Google Checkout and Dwolla in one place.
The tool will allow companies to make and receive
payments through an online payment page that users
can set up themselves. It currently is free to use, at
www.inspirepay.com. In the future, the company
plans to make money by rolling out premium versions
of its services and charging for them, and from new
merchant accounts.
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culture of the place, what makes it
successful. I’m trying to understand
what makes it work well,” he said.
Five months into the job, he characterizes what he’s done so far — made
250 Cherrywood
Lafayette, CO 80026
A place where children are valued and respected.
Just the Facts
•Children work in an environment that is designed with them in mind.
•Children are encouraged to work at their own pace, realizing this is the
best way to lengthen attention spans and allow the child to define
their inner work cycle.
•Children are encouraged to be responsible for themselves and their
environment.
•Children are encouraged to challenge themselves to try new things
•Children are encouraged to learn from observation of others.
• For children from ages infant thru the 5th grade.
Call for more information
303-665-6789 • www.adventuremontessori.com
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BOU LDER — T he Friends’
School in Boulder has changed little
since Steve de Beer took over last
summer.
So far, his leadership style appears
to be less the volcanic change that
some heads of school institute out
of necessity or to make their mark,
and more like the incremental movement of a season melting into a new
season.
While he talks about how much
he’s learning and how he supports
teachers, the job is still new to him.
There’s also the feeling that de Beer
is a man who takes his time.
Forty-four years old, his previous
appointment at the Stanley British
Primary School in Denver, where he
taught students, teachers and headed
the theater department, lasted two
decades.
The appointment as head of school
at the Friends’ School is de Beer’s second job since graduating. Oriented
toward the many small changes that
will grow naturally from his back-
plans for a new summer theater program and marketing effort support
— as “small tweeks.”
His predecessor, Polly Donald,
➤ See De Beer, 14A
14A
|
Jan. 6-19, 2012 differences
from 12A
no “screen time” in the classroom for
children under 7. They ask parents to
follow the same strict “media policy”
at home by prohibiting television,
computers, video games or other
“screens” for young children. It’s
something that pays dividends later,
Levine said.
“Students hold their connections
with their family better,” she said.
“They don’t just talk to people in
terms of a movie plot.”
The policy also frees time for reading and learning an instrument. All
students begin the wooden recorder
in first grade then move to a stringed
instrument in third. Studying a musical instrument promotes academic
growth and encourages important
life skills.
“Music and math are related a lot
of the research shows, so it teaches
mathematical skills and also teaches them perseverance and practice,
which they can apply to everything,”
Zeender said. Waldorf teachers
direct student learning and integrate
academic topics across subject areas
using strategies begun by Rudolf
Steiner in the early 1900s.
“The Waldorf curriculum has
been around for 100 years ... there
De Beer
Boulder County Business Report | www.bcbr.com
The Waldorf curriculum has been around for 100 years ...
there are no fads here, and we have thousands of graduates
around the world.
Jane Zeender
development director,
Shining Mountain Waldorf
are no fads here, and we have thousands of graduates around the world,”
Zeender said.
Montessori education began in
Italy in 1906 not as a school but as
a “house of children,” according to
Stephenson.
Boulder’s Jarrow Montessori
School began in 1964. The school
serves 155 students from preschool
through sixth grade. In Montessori
education, children direct their own
learning with teachers guiding them
along the path, something that is fostered by Montessori age groupings.
“They are always in three year
age groups,” said Barb Truan, head
of school at Jarrow Montessori. This
allows for developmental differences
among students of the same age and
encourages a sense of competency.
“They really blossom and develop
and fully round out in that third year
of each phase,” Truan said.
Students self-direct their learning in Montessori, Truan said, rather
than relying on a teacher to deliver
knowledge. Classroom materials promote self-correction and lessen adult
interference, she said.
“In Montessori, teachers lead the
children to discover things on their
own,” Truan said. Real world situations are learning opportunities,
too, she said. For instance, preschoolaged children make their own snack
and clean up themselves. Teachers
provide ample time for youngsters
awards
from 13A
filled her 17-year tenure with increasing enrollment from 70 to 170,
overseeing construction of physical
structures such as the elementary
building, obtaining accreditation,
filling out the staff with a music
teacher and librarian, and developing
curriculum and fundraising. On the
other side of it, de Beer is the guy
who will bring the Friends’ School,
in terms of marketing at least, into
the current century.
As de Beer sees it now, part of
the job is as “No. 1 storyteller,” letting the community know what the
Friends’ School is about, and giving it a face on the Friends’ School
website, on Facebook, on Twitter,
classroom webpages, and in the
blog, “Among Friends Reflections
from our Head of School.” De Beer
spends a great deal of time in the
classrooms, and he always has his
phone on him. He’s the author of
most of the posts for the Friends’
School’s Facebook page, and, possibly due to his efforts, readership
is up. In addition, parent education
events and preschool information
meetings have experienced record
attendance.
“I’m social media savvy and am
able to parley what they (the school)
is doing,” he said.”
The change in marketing was in
the pipeline for the Friends’ School
before de Beer came along. The
school had hired Monique Davis
of Davis Branding & Marketing in
Denver, to modernize its way of
getting the word out. De Beer is a
writer who meets with a writing
group a few times a month, has been
to put on their own shoes and coats
in an effort to encourage self-reliance. Children are given time to
explore the natural world outside of
the classroom and make their own
discoveries.
This system fosters self-confidence, builds community, and shelters children from the rush of the
modern world, said Cindy Grace,
Jarrow Montessori teacher and director of admissions.
“The children can make mistakes
and then correct themselves rather
than having a teacher tell them it’s
wrong, so that builds self-confidence
and self-esteem,” Grace said. “Children who come from a Montessori
classroom are really willing to challenge themselves.”
This self-directed, cross-curricular, passion-driven approach produces learners ready to face life’s
complicated challenges.
“The child can really have a
grounded sense of self-confidence ...
something that allows the child to
succeed anywhere: in an interview,
when seeking a life partner, in a
job,” Grace said. “We want to set up
a child for success no matter where
they go.”
I’m social media
savvy and am able to
parley what they
(the school) is doing.
Steve de Beer
head of school,
Friends’ School
published in The Denver Post and
5280 magazine, and has maintained
a personal blog since 2008, making
him a good fit for marketing efforts
using the Internet.
Alongside marketing support, and
the day-to-day activities of a head
of school, which de Beer compares
to being the “CEO of a small company,” he’ll maintain the 24-yearold school’s curriculum philosophy,
which places an “emphasis on social/
emotional development,” he said.
“We encourage students to find out
who they are as learners, and we
keep up with the latest research (in
education) and take in the best of
everything.”
While student-led learning wasn’t
the tradition of de Beer’s youth,
he’s a firm believer in it. He said
that his punitive boarding school
background in the 1970s and 1980s
demonstrated to him the importance
of a partnership between kids and
teachers. De Beer, a native of West
Sussex, England, started boarding
school at age 7.
“(At that time), the emphasis
was on rote learning, but that’s not
how I learned. I’m a visual learner,”
he said. At the Friends’ School, de
Beer found a philosophical match in
that the teachers employ all learning modalities, visual, auditory and
kinesthetic, to meet the needs of
students. De Beer has a bachelor’s
degree in French and linguistics from
the University of York in England and
a master’s degree in teacher education from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.
Classroom sizes at the Friends’
School are small with a high teacher
to student ratio. In preschool there
are three teachers to every 16 students. In the upper grade classrooms,
17 to 21 students to one teacher and
one part-time teacher candidate are
the norm. The teacher candidate
works Monday through Thursday in
the classroom, and is required to take
classes offered by the Friends’ School
in partnership with the University of
Denver on Friday.
In an effort to promote economic
diversity, tuition is on a sliding scale
in. For a full-time student the cost
ranges from $ 6,000 to $14,000,
depending on income; a family making $25,000 a year pays the lower
price. A family making $125,000
a year pays the upper end of the
scale. There are eight payment levels. Preschool ranges from $3,600 to
$5,000 for three mornings per week.
Considerable supplemental financial
aid assistance is available as needed.
Approximately one-third of the students receive financial assistance
each year.
The Colorado BioScience Association named Timothy
Rodell, president and chief executive of Louisville-based
GlobeImmune Inc., as its Volunteer of the Year. Rodell’s
leadership and community involvement greatly contributed to Colorado’s bioscience industry. He contributed
to U.S. Sen. Michael Bennet’s Colorado Competes
Report as a member of the Innovation Roundtable. He
also has been a voice at the federal level with a seat
on BIO’s national Board leading our industry forward.
The association unveiled winners of its 2011 industry
awards at its Annual Awards Dinner Dec. 8 in Denver.
Other award winners were Lifetime Achievement Award
- Brian, Greg and Jeff Baldwin, Baxa Corp., Englewood;
Company of the Year - LABS Inc., Centennial; Rising Star
of the Year - Ventria Bioscience, Fort Collins; Educator
of the Year - Melissa Reynolds, assistant professor of
chemistry, Colorado State University, Fort Collins; Business Partner of the Year - Ernst & Young, Denver; Legislator of the Year - State Rep. Cheri Gerou; Chairman’s
Award - Johnson & Johnson; Chairman’s Award - U.S.
Sen. Michael Bennet.
Matrix Technologies Inc., headquartered in Maumee, Ohio, with an office in Broomfield, has been
named System Integrator of the Year by Control Engineering magazine. This is the second time Matrix has
earned this honor; the first time was in 2008. Matrix
Technologies is an employee-owned company with
more than 180 employees and offices in Maumee,
Ohio; Broomfield, Colorado; Indianapolis, Indiana; and
Knoxville, Tennessee.
Boulder-based Market Force Information Inc., a provider of customer intelligence solutions, and its client
ConocoPhillips received the Ventana Research Leadership Award for Customer Excellence. The Ventana
Research 2011 Leadership Awards recognizes innovative companies and their customers that have most
effectively achieved success through the use of people,
processes, information, technology and best practices.
This is the second recent honor bestowed upon Market
Force, which was also recently named to Forbes’ list of
America’s 100 Most Promising Companies.
internet news
RockyNet.com Inc., a Louisville-based data center and
cloud computing provider, recently relaunched its’ website, www.rockynet.com. The project redesign began
after RockyNet, founded in 1996, sold the majority of
its’ VoIP and Internet service accounts to IP5280 this
past spring. The new Web site focuses on RockyNet’s
current product set of colocation, dedicated servers
and virtual machines. One of the project’s objectives is
for users to have an easy-to-navigate website to find
their desired information. The new website showcases
the latest web technology by providing an easy user
interface complete with a blog, videos and tutorials.
Zach Baxter acted as webmaster on the project, and
Nicole Swilpa served as lead designer.
Jan. 6-19, 2012
Boulder County Business Report | www.bcbr.com
leads
|
15A
Bankruptcies
Foreclosures
State Tax Liens
Warranty Deeds
Applications for bankruptcy protection are filed with
the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Denver. Chapter 7
denotes filings made for liquidation. Chapter 11 indicates filings for reorganization. Chapter 13 indicates
filings that enable petitioners to pay off their creditors
over three to five years.
Includes notices of election and demand filed by
creditors alleging default on a debt. Foreclosures
are not final until a Public Trustee’s Deed has been
issued.
Judgments filed against assets of individuals or businesses with delinquent taxes.
Transfers property while guaranteeing a clear title free
of any encumbrances that are not listed on the deed.
Judgments
This information is obtained from SKLD Information
Services.
Boulder County
Chapter 7
LON JOSEPH JR LHEUREUX, 2544
CROWLEY DR, LAFAYETTE; CASE
#2011-38236, DATE FILED: 12/6/11/
DONALD A PALINCKX, 819
PARKLANE AVE, LONGMONT; CASE
#2011-38237, DATE FILED: 12/6/11/
GARY A COOPER, 2736 BIGHORN
CIRCLE, LAFAYETTE; CASE #201138243, DATE FILED: 12/6/11/
AISHA RAINBOW SUMMER, 6630
KALUA ROAD, BOULDER; CASE
#2011-38322, DATE FILED: 12/7/11/
JAMIE SPRINGER, 211 SKYLARK
CIR, LAFAYETTE; CASE #201138355, DATE FILED: 12/7/11/
DAVID HEITH EMMITT, 4246 LEE
HILL DRIVE, BOULDER; CASE
#2011-38413, DATE FILED: 12/8/11/
PATRICK JOHN RUSSELL, 3630
MOUNTAIN VIEW AVENUE, LONGMONT; CASE #2011-38434, DATE
FILED: 12/8/11/
THOMAS W SPEAR, 7675 N 35TH
STREET, BOULDER; CASE #201138455, DATE FILED: 12/8/11/
MICHELLE WILLIX, 3120 CORONA
TRAIL #104, BOULDER; CASE
#2011-38501, DATE FILED: 12/9/11/
DANIEL J NICHOLS, 1420 FILLMORE PLACE, LOUISVILLE; CASE
#2011-38536, DATE FILED: 12/9/11/
FRANCES HERRERA, 11700 E
SOUTH BOULDER RD 311, LAFAYETTE; CASE #2011-38571, DATE
FILED: 12/9/11/
LORETTA RUTH ADAIR, 930 BUTTON ROCK DR UNIT 61, LONGMONT; CASE #2011-38609, DATE
FILED: 12/10/11/
VALINE FELAN, 328 COLUMBINE
PL, LONGMONT; CASE #201138659, DATE FILED: 12/12/11/
TIMOTHY LYLE HANRATTY,
6370 EAGLE CT, LONGMONT;
CASE #2011-38836, DATE FILED:
12/14/11/
KANDICE M MORGAN, 9576
PHILLIPS ROAD, LAFAYETTE;
CASE #2011-38899, DATE FILED:
12/15/11/
JOSEPH BRIAN BEELER, 3850
14TH STREET, BOULDER; CASE
#2011-38914, DATE FILED:
12/15/11/
NICOLE STIBI, 4791 WHITE
ROCK CIRCLE APT C, BOULDER;
CASE #2011-38943, DATE FILED:
12/15/11/
Chapter 13
NANCY M MARESH, PO BOX
18207, BOULDER; CASE #201138391, DATE FILED: 12/7/11/
MARK N NELSON, 1262 GREENING AVE, ERIE; CASE #2011-38442,
DATE FILED: 12/8/11/
TAMARA BRADLEY, 1444 GAY
STREET, LONGMONT; CASE #201138582, DATE FILED: 12/9/11/
GINA WESTOVER, 1012 ARTEMIS
CIRCLE, LAFAYETTE; CASE #201138637, DATE FILED: 12/12/11/
CYNTHIA IRENE MUNOZ, 1955
SPRUCE COURT, ERIE; CASE
#2011-38861, DATE FILED:
12/14/11/
Broomfield County
Chapter 7
ANTHONY WAYNE LEMAITRE,
13207 BRYANT CIR, BROOMFIELD;
CASE #2011-38304, DATE FILED:
12/7/11/
DANIEL RICHARD VAIL, PO BOX
132, BROOMFIELD; CASE #201138360, DATE FILED: 12/7/11/
KRISTI R HYATT, 2650 W 133RD
CIRCLE, BROOMFIELD; CASE
#2011-38532, DATE FILED: 12/9/11/
JOHN JAMES GAUMOND, 1600
EMERALD ST, BROOMFIELD; CASE
#2011-38555, DATE FILED: 12/9/11/
JARED HAGEN, 50225 SPYGLASS
DRIVE, BROOMFIELD; CASE #201138572, DATE FILED: 12/9/11/
Chapter 13
STEPHANIE PEEBLES, 3322
W 134TH AVE, BROOMFIELD;
CASE #2011-38644, DATE FILED:
12/12/11/
Foreclosures
Boulder County
BORROWER: DONNA L
BOROWSKI, 2040 MAPLETON AVE,
BOULDER, 80304-4269. LENDER:
DAVID A GRENIS. AMOUNT DUE:
$1070218. CASE #. DATE: 11/22/11.
BORROWER: ROBERT D & CAROL
L AFFLECK, 8757 N 87TH ST,
LONGMONT, 80503-8550. LENDER:
BANK NEW YORK MELLON TRUSTEE. AMOUNT DUE: $893353. CASE
#2007-2862439. DATE: 11/29/11.
BORROWER: LINDA L KESERIC,
1050 NEON FOREST CIR, LONGMONT, 80504-7016. LENDER: BANK
NEW YORK MELLON TRUSTEE.
AMOUNT DUE: $599451. CASE
#2007-2846396. DATE: 12/9/11.
BORROWER: GREGORY P &
THERESA E HARTMANN, 4072 SPY
GLASS LN, LONGMONT, 805038355. LENDER: BEAR STEARNS
ARM TRUST 2005 6. AMOUNT DUE:
$579564. CASE #2005-2694065.
DATE: 11/29/11.
BORROWER: JOHN D & MELISSA
A HICKEY, 2905 ISLAND DR, BOULDER, 80301-5922. LENDER: CITIMORTGAGE INC. AMOUNT DUE:
$578865. CASE #2005-2714786.
DATE: 12/7/11.
BORROWER: DON & JENNIFER
LOU LUCAS, 826 PLATEAU RD,
LONGMONT, 80504-5666. LENDER:
US BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION
T. AMOUNT DUE: $577500. CASE
#2005-2710739. DATE: 11/22/11.
BORROWER: TED MADZEY, 2001
MESA DR, BOULDER, 80304-3688.
LENDER: WELLS FARGO BANK.
AMOUNT DUE: $553484. CASE
#2007-2877805. DATE: 11/23/11.
BORROWER: MELINDA L HAMMERS, 1902 AMETHYST DR, LONGMONT, 80504-7782. LENDER: BANK
NEW YORK MELLON TRUSTEE.
AMOUNT DUE: $549450. CASE
#2007-2837207. DATE: 11/21/11.
BORROWER: YUKO ARIMORI &
EARL LEROY WILSON, 1625 GILLASPIE DR, BOULDER, 80305-7028.
LENDER: PNMAC MORTGAGE CO
LLC. AMOUNT DUE: $403505. CASE
#2000-2079633. DATE: 11/29/11.
BORROWER: JOSEPH A & TERI
L MORELLI, 3027 MIDDLE FORK
RD, BOULDER, 80302-9376.
LENDER: JPMORGAN CHASE
BANK NATIONAL A. AMOUNT DUE:
$390818. CASE #2007-2849178.
DATE: 11/21/11.
BORROWER: BROOKS SMITH,
24 QUALLA CT, BOULDER, 803033900. LENDER: BANK NEW YORK
MELLON TRUSTEE. AMOUNT DUE:
$340000. CASE #2006-2760666.
DATE: 11/22/11.
BORROWER: JAMES L PULLEN,
7660 CHATHAM WAY, BOULDER,
80301-4038. LENDER: CITIMORTGAGE INC. AMOUNT DUE: $328908.
CASE #2008-2926164. DATE:
11/23/11.
BORROWER: JILL E SULLIVAN,
6808 HARVEST RD, BOULDER,
80301-3609. LENDER: BANK
NEW YORK MELLON TRUSTEE.
AMOUNT DUE: $327782. CASE
#2004-2621494. DATE: 11/30/11.
BORROWER: KRISTY L & DERYK
A RIVELAND, 32290 HIGHWAY 72,
GOLDEN, 80403-8485. LENDER:
BANK AMERICA. AMOUNT DUE:
$322096. CASE #2004-2646081.
DATE: 12/9/11.
Judgments constitute decisions by a court of law
against an individual or corporation for payment of
monetary damages.
BORROWER: JASWINDER SINGH,
1337 RESERVE DR, LONGMONT,
80504-2672. LENDER: US BANK
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION T.
AMOUNT DUE: $304277. CASE
#2007-2841909. DATE: 11/23/11.
BORROWER: GERARD P ECKERT,
1715 15TH ST APT 2, BOULDER,
80302-6348. LENDER: BANK AMERICA. AMOUNT DUE: $278178. CASE
#2007-2860169. DATE: 11/22/11.
BORROWER: TIMOTHY W & MARY
GRACE DALTON, 495 VERNIER CT,
LAFAYETTE, 80026-3121. LENDER:
BANK AMERICA NATIONAL ASSOCIAT. AMOUNT DUE: $271281.
CASE #2003-2398058. DATE:
12/9/11.
BORROWER: CRAIG MALLEY,
1228 JEFFERSON AVE, LOUISVILLE,
80027-1751. LENDER: BANK AMERICA. AMOUNT DUE: $265747. CASE
#2004-2640557. DATE: 11/29/11.
BORROWER: KEVIN M HART, 5901
LEFTHAND CANYON DR, JAMESTOWN, 80455-9707. LENDER: PNC
BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION.
AMOUNT DUE: $258447. CASE
#2004-2652655. DATE: 11/23/11.
BORROWER: NORBERT SZYDLOWSKI, 3210 FOLSOM ST,
BOULDER, 80304-2432. LENDER:
BANK AMERICA. AMOUNT DUE:
$248156. CASE #2006-2757805.
DATE: 11/22/11.
BORROWER: AMY KREAMER,
3185 E YARROW CIR, SUPERIOR,
80027-6026. LENDER: DEUTSCHE
BANK NATIONAL TRUST C.
AMOUNT DUE: $246231. CASE
#2007-2828259. DATE: 11/28/11.
BORROWER: BART DOUGLAS
COOK, 2406 SKYSAIL CT, LONGMONT, 80503-9281. LENDER:
WELLS FARGO BK. AMOUNT DUE:
$243620. CASE #2009-3028534.
DATE: 12/2/11.
BORROWER: SANDRA A ANDERSON, 1412 SERENITY CIR, LONGMONT, 80504-2358. LENDER: PNC
BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION.
AMOUNT DUE: $239477. CASE
#2005-2708064. DATE: 12/2/11.
BORROWER: CORINNE M GALLEGOS, 770 PAN CT, LAFAYETTE,
80026-8815. LENDER: CITIMORTGAGE INC. AMOUNT DUE: $235655.
CASE #2007-2880822. DATE:
11/28/11.
BORROWER: ELAINE MASON, 80
HOOSIER CT, NEDERLAND, 804669744. LENDER: PROVIDENT FUNDING ASSOCIATES L. AMOUNT DUE:
$232008. CASE #2007-2876249.
DATE: 12/2/11.
BORROWER: DEBRA L FARO, 375
CASPER DR, LAFAYETTE, 800269023. LENDER: BANK AMERICA.
AMOUNT DUE: $230272. CASE
#2006-2806440. DATE: 11/29/11.
BORROWER: CHAD M & MELANIE
M KNOWLDEN, 820 HOVER ST,
LONGMONT, 80501-4776. LENDER:
FLAGSTAR BANK FSB. AMOUNT
DUE: $214517. CASE #20082940632. DATE: 11/22/11.
BORROWER: KAISA ULLSVIK, 502
COPPERDALE LN, GOLDEN, 804039777. LENDER: CITIMORTGAGE
INC. AMOUNT DUE: $193426. CASE
#2005-2693813. DATE: 11/30/11.
DUE: $186000. CASE #20022271041. DATE: 11/30/11.
BORROWER: PETER M MYERS,
736 MEEKER ST, LONGMONT,
80504-2205. LENDER: PNC BANK
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION. AMOUNT
DUE: $183085. CASE #20052701005. DATE: 11/21/11.
BORROWER: PETER H SWIFT,
1699 GENEVA CIR, LONGMONT,
80503-1754. LENDER: US BANK NA
TRUSTEE. AMOUNT DUE: $177508.
CASE #2004-2597560. DATE:
11/21/11.
BORROWER: MARIA MADRIGAL,
1912 COREY ST, LONGMONT,
80501-1906. LENDER: WELLS
FARGO BANK NA TRUSTEE.
AMOUNT DUE: $177000. CASE
#2000-2084892. DATE: 12/6/11.
BORROWER: GEORGIA NAUGHTON, 6161 BASELINE RD, BOULDER, 80303-3054. LENDER: JPMORGAN CHASE BANK NATIONAL
A. AMOUNT DUE: $174757. CASE
#2007-2842452. DATE: 12/7/11.
BORROWER: WILLIAM S SNIFF,
819 E CLEVELAND ST, LAFAYETTE, 80026-2309. LENDER: US
BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION
T. AMOUNT DUE: $171436. CASE
#2005-2690899. DATE: 11/22/11.
BORROWER: CHARLES H
RADEMACHER, 1609 JAMISON PL,
LONGMONT, 80501-1012. LENDER:
BANK AMERICA. AMOUNT DUE:
$167328. CASE #2002-2332729.
DATE: 11/29/11.
BORROWER: JANET BUCKNER,
2236 TULIP ST, LONGMONT, 805010936. LENDER: BANK AMERICA.
AMOUNT DUE: $162764. CASE
#2007-2876292. DATE: 11/29/11.
BORROWER: ANGEL JR & PATRICIA GONZALEZ, 1555 19TH AVE,
LONGMONT, 80501-1861. LENDER:
COLORADO HOUSING FINANCE
AUTHO. AMOUNT DUE: $154877.
CASE #2008-2962901. DATE:
11/22/11.
BORROWER: LLOYD & PATRICIA
MCKENZIE, 1845 DUCHESS DR,
LONGMONT, 80501-2033. LENDER:
WELLS FARGO BANK. AMOUNT
DUE: $153139. CASE #20072897381. DATE: 11/23/11.
BORROWER: LAWRENCE J & ANN
M KOSLOVSKY, 1606 MOUNT
EVANS DR, LONGMONT, 805043029. LENDER: CITIMORTGAGE
INC. AMOUNT DUE: $151376. CASE
#2005-2685289. DATE: 12/8/11.
BORROWER: RICHARD S SHANE,
740 UTICA AVE, BOULDER, 803040755. LENDER: BANK NEW YORK
MELLON TRUSTEE. AMOUNT DUE:
$150087. CASE #2005-2710405.
DATE: 11/29/11.
BORROWER: DEXTER RALPH II
& KENNETHA K KRUTSCH, 1537
CALKINS AVE, LONGMONT, 805011866. LENDER: BANK AMERICA.
AMOUNT DUE: $149787. CASE
#2004-2557696. DATE: 11/22/11.
BORROWER: STEPHEN M KENDELL, 2406 DODD LN, LONGMONT,
80501-1017. LENDER: BANK
NEW YORK MELLON TRUSTEE.
AMOUNT DUE: $149339. CASE
#2006-2821718. DATE: 11/22/11.
BORROWER: LEE J MALWITZ, 1554
FELTHAM PL, LONGMONT, 805011858. LENDER: METLIFE HOME
LOANS. AMOUNT DUE: $193372.
CASE #2009-3048716. DATE:
11/29/11.
BORROWER: THOMAS C GRAY,
517 INDEPENDENCE DR, LONGMONT, 80504-3920. LENDER:
COLORADO HOUSING FINANCE
AUTHO. AMOUNT DUE: $148250.
CASE #2005-2720004. DATE:
11/23/11.
BORROWER: DEBBIE L & DERROLD J BARRY, 1421 S COFFMAN
ST, LONGMONT, 80501-6934.
LENDER: CITIMORTGAGE INC.
AMOUNT DUE: $193204. CASE
#2009-3038958. DATE: 12/7/11.
BORROWER: CRAIG J & SARA
M LEVIN, 1317 TRAIL RIDGE RD,
LONGMONT, 80504-8746. LENDER:
BANK AMERICA. AMOUNT DUE:
$147540. CASE #2003-2455992.
DATE: 12/7/11.
BORROWER: JAMES E & SHEILA R
CIN FRANTZ, 778 GLENHAVEN CT,
BOULDER, 80303-3224. LENDER:
WELLS FARGO BANK. AMOUNT
BORROWER: BRIAN & KORRI
MEIN, 1116 MEADOW ST, LONGMONT, 80501-3429. LENDER:
DEUTSCHE BANK NATIONAL
TRUST C. AMOUNT DUE: $143144.
CASE #2006-2794123. DATE:
11/22/11.
TOR: CENTRAL CREDIT CORP.
AMOUNT: $3279.07. CASE #C-10C005619. DATE: 12/2/11.
BORROWER: TAMMY DRAKE, 2400
LINDEN ST, LONGMONT, 805010907. LENDER: US BANK NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION T. AMOUNT DUE:
$142187. CASE #2005-2712625.
DATE: 11/23/11.
DEBTOR: RICHARD L FERRARI,
CREDITOR: WESTERRA CREDIT
UNION. AMOUNT: $0. CASE #C06C4553. DATE: 11/28/11.
BORROWER: LOYD R WOOLERY,
39 SKI RD, ALLENSPARK, 805100342. LENDER: US BANK NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION T. AMOUNT DUE:
$140453. CASE #2005-2720912.
DATE: 11/22/11.
BORROWER: SONJA SCHURIG,
1019 ALTA ST, LONGMONT, 805014306. LENDER: FIRST HORIZON
HOME LOANS. AMOUNT DUE:
$135486. CASE #2007-2862525.
DATE: 11/29/11.
BORROWER: FREDERICK
CHARLES & LEONA PAULA HEIMBECHER, 1205 LINCOLN ST, LONGMONT, 80501-3817. LENDER: ONEWEST BANK FSB. AMOUNT DUE:
$132739. CASE #2002-2300154.
DATE: 12/9/11.
BORROWER: WILLIAM & JACQUELYN C BIANCHI, 1004 MALORY ST,
LAFAYETTE, 80026-1926. LENDER:
BANK AMERICA. AMOUNT DUE:
$125258. CASE #2006-2795233.
DATE: 11/30/11.
BORROWER: WILLA M FLORES,
1333 MARTIN ST, LONGMONT,
80504-1219. LENDER: DEUTSCHE
BANK NATIONAL TRUST C.
AMOUNT DUE: $116251. CASE
#2004-2547401. DATE: 11/29/11.
BORROWER: TAMMY ARMIJO,
1649 HARRIS ST, SUPERIOR,
80027-4442. LENDER: WELLS
FARGO BANK NA TRUSTEE.
AMOUNT DUE: $110901. CASE
#2004-2591480. DATE: 12/8/11.
BORROWER: JUDITH A CONDON,
1601 GREAT WESTERN DR UNIT J4,
LONGMONT, 80501-9790. LENDER:
BANK AMERICA NATIONAL ASSOCIAT. AMOUNT DUE: $103774.
CASE #2006-2816170. DATE:
11/22/11.
BORROWER: RANDY & HOLLY
CHRISTENSEN, 301 GROSS DAM
RD, GOLDEN, 80403. LENDER:
MUTUAL OMAHA BANK. AMOUNT
DUE: $102333. CASE #20052677694. DATE: 11/21/11.
Broomfield County
BORROWER: COLEMAN W
HUGHES, 13646 PLASTER PT #
101, BROOMFIELD, 80023-4254.
LENDER: WELLS FARGO BANK.
AMOUNT DUE: $271347. CASE
#2008-3660. DATE: 12/1/11.
BORROWER: STEVE A STEELE,
1377 LOCH NESS AVE, BROOMFIELD, 80020-2468. LENDER: BANK
AMERICA NA SBM. AMOUNT DUE:
$224926. CASE #2003-13901. DATE:
12/1/11.
DEBTOR: ANN M KOSLOVSKY,
CREDITOR: ALPINE CREDIT INC.
AMOUNT: $0. CASE #. DATE:
11/29/11.
DEBTOR: DEANA M & DEANA
KLEIN, CREDITOR: CACH LLC.
AMOUNT: $0. CASE #C-07C5667.
DATE: 11/30/11.
DEBTOR: BAGI MECHANICAL
LLC, CREDITOR: BOULDER WINNELSON CO. AMOUNT: $0. CASE
#D-09CV1086. DATE: 12/5/11.
DEBTOR: HOLLAND WHITE,
CREDITOR: BC SERVICES INC.
AMOUNT: $0. CASE #C-07C1130.
DATE: 12/8/11.
Broomfield County
DEBTOR: JATINDER & JAY
DUREJA, CREDITOR: 2301 BLAKE
STREET LLLP. AMOUNT: $0. CASE
#. DATE: 12/7/11.
Judgments
Boulder County
DEBTOR: RICHARD BARTELS,
CREDITOR: BK CHOICE. AMOUNT:
$1424908.33. CASE #C-11CV000008. DATE: 12/1/11.
DEBTOR: MARTINEZ PROPERTIES LLC, CREDITOR: TERRAMAR
INVEST LLC. AMOUNT: $829390.16.
CASE #D-11CV-000906. DATE:
11/29/11.
DEBTOR: TOM VAN LON, CREDITOR: ERIE COMMONS COMMERCIAL PARTNE. AMOUNT: $477493.4.
CASE #C-10CV-001057. DATE:
12/2/11.
DEBTOR: JOHN A HUNTER
MANAGEMENT CORP, CaREDITOR: ARAPAHOE CROSSINGS LP.
AMOUNT: $342628.39. CASE #D11CV-202434. DATE: 11/21/11.
DEBTOR: RANDALL BERNARD,
CREDITOR: BK WEST. AMOUNT:
$290657.78. CASE #D-11CV003096. DATE: 11/22/11.
DEBTOR: CHADWICK RICHARDSON, CREDITOR: BK MIDWEST.
AMOUNT: $257968.79. CASE #D11CV-004678. DATE: 12/1/11.
DEBTOR: ROGER L SCHAGER, CREDITOR: USA. AMOUNT:
$252773.86. CASE #D-CR91-3001.
DATE: 11/22/11.
DEBTOR: BLUE RIDGE FARMS
LLC, CREDITOR: JOEL POIRIER.
AMOUNT: $176000. CASE #D-11CV005160. DATE: 12/2/11.
DEBTOR: CRAIG & LEA FOSTER,
CREDITOR: YOSEMITE PARK 05.
AMOUNT: $33360.02. CASE #D11CV-202914. DATE: 12/8/11.
BORROWER: AARON STINSON,
1166 OPAL ST UNIT 103, BROOMFIELD, 80020-7059. LENDER:
AUROR. AMOUNT DUE: $125954.
CASE #2006-14651. DATE: 12/5/11.
DEBTOR: PAUL J LINDBURG,
CREDITOR: CITIBANK SOUTH
DAKOTA. AMOUNT: $29322.29.
CASE #D-11CV-000230. DATE:
12/2/11.
Release of judgment
Boulder County
DEBTOR: DANIEL & DANIEL
HOWAR ONG, CREDITOR: D M
ADJUSTMENT CO. AMOUNT:
$26791.98. CASE #C-05C-004724.
DATE: 11/23/11.
DEBTOR: LASZLO BAGI, CREDITOR: BOULDER WINNELSON CO.
AMOUNT: $20543.33. CASE #D09CV1086. DATE: 12/5/11.
DEBTOR: BEVERLYN A JORMAN,
CREDITOR: US BK. AMOUNT:
$6526.52. CASE #C-05C-004230.
DATE: 11/22/11.
DEBTOR: ERIC J HORNE,
CREDITOR: COLO ST REVENUE.
AMOUNT: $5503.33. CASE #DD72010CV801489. DATE: 11/30/11.
DEBTOR: GLEN A BUTLER, CREDITOR: DWIGHT ZWICK. AMOUNT:
$4927.11. CASE #C-03C-000357.
DATE: 11/30/11.
DEBTOR: DAVID D DONES, CREDI-
DEBTOR: BEN COOK, CREDITOR:
AM EXPRESS CENTURION BK.
AMOUNT: $26300.43. CASE #D11CV-000384. DATE: 11/21/11.
DEBTOR: JANEEN OSNES, CREDITOR: WELLS FARGO BK. AMOUNT:
$22299. CASE #D-11CV-000557.
DATE: 12/2/11.
DEBTOR: MICHAEL PORTER,
CREDITOR: ELEVATIONS CREDIT
UNION. AMOUNT: $15888.26. CASE
#C-09C-001202. DATE: 12/7/11.
DEBTOR: JAMES P REEVES,
CREDITOR: FIA CARD SERVICES.
16A
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AMOUNT: $15803.04. CASE #D11CV-000933. DATE: 11/30/11.
DEBTOR: J FOREST KELLY,
CREDITOR: CITIBANK. AMOUNT:
$13517.45. CASE #C-11C-003377.
DATE: 12/8/11.
DEBTOR: LESTER ROBERT
EMBREE, CREDITOR: FIRESIDE
BK. AMOUNT: $12055.15. CASE #D11CV-006895. DATE: 11/29/11.
DEBTOR: CHARLES J BARTKO,
CREDITOR: FIA CARD SERVICES.
AMOUNT: $11569.07. CASE #C11C-003184. DATE: 12/2/11.
DEBTOR: MICHAEL N PADILLA,
CREDITOR: UC FED CU. AMOUNT:
$11247.18. CASE #C-05C-001479.
DATE: 12/6/11.
DEBTOR: BRENDA PEARSON,
CREDITOR: CAPITAL ONE BK USA.
AMOUNT: $11054.22. CASE #C11C-002258. DATE: 12/1/11.
DEBTOR: NATURAL BURGER INC,
CREDITOR: QUIK CAPITAL LLC.
AMOUNT: $9849.02. CASE #C-11C000693. DATE: 12/8/11.
DEBTOR: PATRICIA A CORDOVA,
CREDITOR: ASSET ACCEPTANCE
LLC. AMOUNT: $9313.74. CASE #C11C-003148. DATE: 12/8/11.
DEBTOR: SOFIA T HARMAN,
CREDITOR: CAPITAL ONE BK USA.
AMOUNT: $8978.22. CASE #C-11C004579. DATE: 12/6/11.
DEBTOR: AMY J CHRISTIANSON,
CREDITOR: CITIBANK. AMOUNT:
$7371.21. CASE #C-11C-003475.
DATE: 12/8/11.
DEBTOR: LEE STANLEY, CREDITOR: LIBERTY ACQUISITIONS SERVICING. AMOUNT: $6760.94. CASE
#C-11C-004596. DATE: 12/6/11.
DEBTOR: BRIDITTE E COLEMAN,
CREDITOR: MIDLAND CREDIT
MANAGEMENT INC. AMOUNT:
$6153.74. CASE #C-10C-005934.
DATE: 11/21/11.
DEBTOR: PATRICE KLIMO,
CREDITOR: CAVALRY PORTFOLIO
SERVICES LLC. AMOUNT: $6005.22.
CASE #C-11C-004553. DATE:
12/6/11.
DEBTOR: KIMBERLY S &
WADE D WISDOM, CREDITOR:
BELLCO CREDIT UNION. AMOUNT:
$5657.71. CASE #C-11C-005063.
DATE: 12/2/11.
DEBTOR: AUTUMN C LIPSCOMB,
CREDITOR: ASSET ACCEPTANCE
LLC. AMOUNT: $5389.48. CASE #C11C-003993. DATE: 12/8/11.
DEBTOR: JAMES J CALVERY,
CREDITOR: ASSET ACCEPTANCE
LLC. AMOUNT: $5277.14. CASE #C11C-003885. DATE: 12/8/11.
DEBTOR: ZANE ANDREW
EDWARDS, CREDITOR: HARVEST CREDIT MANAGEMENT VII.
AMOUNT: $5103.4. CASE #C-11C001227. DATE: 12/8/11.
DEBTOR: CAROL FISHBACK,
CREDITOR: MIDLAND CREDIT
MANAGEMENT INC. AMOUNT:
$4374.7. CASE #C-11C-002668.
DATE: 12/2/11.
DEBTOR: KEITH MHAAGENSON, CREDITOR: GE MONEY BK.
AMOUNT: $3985.81. CASE #C-11C002478. DATE: 12/2/11.
DEBTOR: TERRI SOMMERVILLE,
CREDITOR: LIBERTY ACQUISITIONS SERVICING. AMOUNT:
$3566.75. CASE #C-11C-004463.
DATE: 12/6/11.
DEBTOR: GERALD E SCHLAGEL,
CREDITOR: BARCLAYS BK DELAWARE. AMOUNT: $3341.48. CASE
#C-11C-003283. DATE: 12/8/11.
DEBTOR: STEVEN & STEVEN H
YOUNG, CREDITOR: BC SERVICES
INC. AMOUNT: $3306.06. CASE #C05C-001262. DATE: 12/6/11.
DEBTOR: LOUISE R KNOWLES,
CREDITOR: PROFESSIONAL FIN
CO INC. AMOUNT: $3065.05. CASE
#C-11C-043317. DATE: 12/2/11.
MANAGEMENT INC. AMOUNT:
$2396.32. CASE #C-11C-002666.
DATE: 11/21/11.
DEBTOR: LORETTA RAZO, CREDITOR: ASSET ACCEPTANCE LLC.
AMOUNT: $2220.87. CASE #C-11C003627. DATE: 12/8/11.
DEBTOR: MOLLE B POWERS,
CREDITOR: PROFESSIONAL FIN
CO INC. AMOUNT: $1871.43. CASE
#C-06C-001708. DATE: 11/22/11.
DEBTOR: NOEMI & JOSE G GONZALEZ, CREDITOR: BC SERVICES
INC. AMOUNT: $1838.51. CASE #C11C-001265. DATE: 12/6/11.
CO. AMOUNT: $15000. CASE #C11C-001534. DATE: 12/5/11.
TEMPERED AIR SERVICES INC,
$7175.24, CASE #3186913, 12/1/11.
DEBTOR: DANIEL SMITH, CREDITOR: FORD MOTOR CREDIT CO.
AMOUNT: $12226.76. CASE #C11C-001571. DATE: 12/5/11.
BARBARA ESTONE, 18446 PO
BOX 95, LONGMONT 80502-0095,
$7162, CASE #3187466, 12/2/11.
DEBTOR: LEE STANLEY, CREDITOR: LIBERTY ACQUISITIONS SERVICING. AMOUNT: $6760.94. CASE
#C-11C-004596. DATE: 12/6/11.
DEBTOR: LIZBETH A & LIZ A TRAHERN, CREDITOR: CAPITAL ONE
BK USA. AMOUNT: $6306.57. CASE
#. DATE: 12/5/11.
DEBTOR: LEONARDO MENDOZA,
CREDITOR: ASSET ACCEPTANCE
LLC. AMOUNT: $1738.85. CASE #C11C-003661. DATE: 12/8/11.
DEBTOR: NEXHORIZON COMMUNICATIONS INC, CREDITOR: FORD
MOTOR CREDIT CO. AMOUNT:
$4726.38. CASE #C-11C-001568.
DATE: 12/5/11.
DEBTOR: GARRETT A DAVIS,
CREDITOR: CAPITAL ONE BK USA.
AMOUNT: $1596.69. CASE #C-11C002967. DATE: 11/22/11.
DEBTOR: ROBERT G MILLER,
CREDITOR: ALPINE CREDIT INC.
AMOUNT: $4102.96. CASE #C-11C001455. DATE: 12/1/11.
DEBTOR: CATHERINE FRANCHINI, CREDITOR: BC SERVICES INC.
AMOUNT: $1484.28. CASE #C-10C000934. DATE: 12/6/11.
DEBTOR: JORGE & PATTY RUIZ,
CREDITOR: PROFESSIONAL FIN
CO INC. AMOUNT: $621.37. CASE
#C-10C-001158. DATE: 12/5/11.
DEBTOR: WILLIAM M HUFF,
CREDITOR: ASSET ACCEPTANCE
LLC. AMOUNT: $1433.54. CASE #C11C-003626. DATE: 12/8/11.
DEBTOR: CHRISTOPHER GREGG
THOMAS, CREDITOR: JOEL
POIRIER. AMOUNT: $176000. CASE
#D-11-13858 ABC. DATE: 12/1/11.
DEBTOR: JOHN IVERS, CREDITOR:
MIDLAND CREDIT MANAGEMENT
INC. AMOUNT: $1408.8. CASE #C11C-002739. DATE: 12/2/11.
Release of state tax liens
Boulder County
DEBTOR: SHERRY PADDOCK,
CREDITOR: CAPITAL ONE BK USA.
AMOUNT: $1353.06. CASE #C-11C003960. DATE: 12/8/11.
DEBTOR: JAVIER RUBIO, CREDITOR: ASSET ACCEPTANCE LLC.
AMOUNT: $1319.49. CASE #C-11C003662. DATE: 12/8/11.
DEBTOR: JEAN JONES ARTINO,
CREDITOR: BC SERVICES INC.
AMOUNT: $1314.44. CASE #C-11C001522. DATE: 12/6/11.
DEBTOR: SOVAN LY, CREDITOR:
LIBERTY ACQUISITIONS SERVICING. AMOUNT: $1195.25. CASE #C11C-003720. DATE: 12/6/11.
DEBTOR: MARIA G GARCIA,
CREDITOR: LIBERTY ACQUISITIONS SERVICING. AMOUNT:
$1106.41. CASE #C-11C-004597.
DATE: 11/22/11.
DEBTOR: MICHAEL SPRINGER,
CREDITOR: LIBERTY ACQUISITIONS SERVICING. AMOUNT:
$1039.23. CASE #C-11C-004464.
DATE: 11/22/11.
DEBTOR: GRACE KELL, CREDITOR: PALISADES COLLECTION
LLC. AMOUNT: $959.77. CASE #C06C-001686. DATE: 12/8/11.
DEBTOR: PHUONG NGUYEN
GREENING, CREDITOR: INTEGRAL
RECOVERIES INC. AMOUNT:
$876.91. CASE #C-08C-004609.
DATE: 11/23/11.
DEBTOR: DIRK & DIANE LARSEN,
CREDITOR: PROFESSIONAL FIN
CO INC. AMOUNT: $822.7. CASE
#C-11C-000769. DATE: 11/29/11.
DEBTOR: EVELIA MEDINA, CREDITOR: GE MONEY BK. AMOUNT:
$653.43. CASE #C-11C-003179.
DATE: 11/22/11.
DEBTOR: JEAN JONES ARTINO,
CREDITOR: BC SERVICES INC.
AMOUNT: $637. CASE #C-11C001522. DATE: 12/6/11.
DEBTOR: CHRISTOPHER GREGG
THOMAS, CREDITOR: JOEL
POIRIER. AMOUNT: $176000. CASE
#D-11-13858ABC. DATE: 12/2/11.
Broomfield County
DEBTOR: RICHARD BARTELS,
CREDITOR: BK CHOICE. AMOUNT:
$1381670.23. CASE #C-11CV000008. DATE: 12/1/11.
DEBTOR: BLUE RIDGE FARMS
LLC, CREDITOR: JOEL POIRIER.
AMOUNT: $176000. CASE #D-11CV005160. DATE: 12/1/11.
DEBTOR: DIRK LARSEN, CREDITOR: PROFESSIONAL FIN CO INC.
AMOUNT: $2517.48. CASE #C-11C000769. DATE: 11/29/11.
DEBTOR: RLC GROUP LLC,
CREDITOR: VILLAGER SQ BROOMFIELD LLC. AMOUNT: $21649.8.
CASE #D-11CV-000140. DATE:
12/6/11.
DEBTOR: CAROL FISHBACK,
CREDITOR: MIDLAND CREDIT
DEBTOR: TRACY L BUGARING,
CREDITOR: FORD MOTOR CREDIT
JAMES TECHNOLOGY INC,
$17606.1, CASE #3188833, 12/7/11.
JAMES TECHNOLOGY INC,
$15682.42, CASE #3188835,
12/7/11.
JAMES TECHNOLOGY INC,
$14306.04, CASE #3188834,
12/7/11.
MARSHALL LABORATORIES INC,
$7068.15, CASE #3187411, 12/2/11.
BOULDER GREENS LLC, $6931,
CASE #3187467, 12/2/11.
PERCEPT TECHNOLOGY LABS
LLC, $6171.42, CASE #3188830,
12/7/11.
CHRISTOPHER ABUTLER,
$5801.98, CASE #3187946, 12/5/11.
GLOBALMED HEALTHCARE
LINEN SER, $5617, CASE
#3187468, 12/2/11.
HANS J & INGEBURG IRUHNKE,
1411 PINEWOOD CT, LONGMONT
80504-2204, $0, CASE #3188815,
12/7/11.
HANS J & INGEBURG IRUHNKE,
1411 PINEWOOD CT, LONGMONT
80504-2204, $0, CASE #3188814,
12/7/11.
HANS J & INGEBURG IRUHNKE,
1411 PINEWOOD CT, LONGMONT
80504-2204, $0, CASE #3188818,
12/7/11.
HANS J & INGEBURG IRUHNKE,
1411 PINEWOOD CT, LONGMONT
80504-2204, $0, CASE #3188817,
12/7/11.
JANET MSCHONS, 1775 SUNSET
BLVD, BOULDER 80304-4242, $0,
CASE #3189005, 12/8/11.
JANET MSCHONS, 1775 SUNSET
BLVD, BOULDER 80304-4242, $0,
CASE #3189006, 12/8/11.
CHARLENETREPKE, 6691 SAINT
VRAIN RD, LONGMONT 805039067, $0, CASE #3185997, 11/28/11.
ALTAMANN CYCLES LLC, $338.62,
CASE #3188829, 12/7/11.
MARQUIS HOMES DESIGN INC,
$269.82, CASE #3185933, 11/28/11.
Seller: FLATIRONS VILLAGE LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: 28TH
AURORA AT BOULDER LLC, 900
28TH ST, BOULDER, CO 803032235
Address: 900 28TH ST, BOULDER,
80303-2235
Price: $6025000
Date closed: 11/14/11
COOKING WITH JAZZ INC,
$3139.35, CASE #3185931,
11/28/11.
DAN LEAHY INC, $2978.58, CASE
#3185936, 11/28/11.
HONDACURRA SERVICE REPAIR
CORP, $2838.65, CASE #3185935,
11/28/11.
CICALA INC BACARO RESTAURANT, $2837, CASE #3187470,
12/2/11.
LYZER DIAGNOSTICS INC,
$2677.58, CASE #3188831, 12/7/11.
PEREA INC, $2593.65, CASE
#3186270, 11/29/11.
RTS SONS INC, $1996, CASE
#3187465, 12/2/11.
HANS J & INGEBURG IRUHNKE,
268 S BUCHANAN CIR, LOUISVILLE
80027-9525, $0, CASE #3188816,
12/7/11.
DESERT MOUNT MEDICINE LTD,
$417.18, CASE #3185350, 11/22/11.
LEGADO GROUP INC, $3275.6,
CASE #3185932, 11/28/11.
AEA AUTO SERVICE LLC,
$1139.03, CASE #3185934,
11/28/11.
HANS JRUHNKE, 1411 PINEWOOD
CT, LONGMONT 80504-2204, $0,
CASE #3188813, 12/7/11.
JOSHBAYLIN, $554.36, CASE
#3187494, 12/2/11.
Warranty deeds
Boulder County
INTREPID CONCRETE LLC,
$2190.49, CASE #3188828, 12/7/11.
MARILYN SILVA KELLOGG TRUST,
2190 VASSAR DR, BOULDER
80305-5609, $0, CASE #3186701,
11/30/11.
SWARMFORCE INC, $594.97,
CASE #3188827, 12/7/11.
ROSA ELVACHAVEZ, $3666.09,
CASE #3185928, 11/28/11.
LITTLE T GOLF INC, $2110.52,
CASE #3187895, 12/5/11.
SHIRLEY A & EUGENE WHORTON,
1924 SUMAC PL, LONGMONT
80501-3124, $0, CASE #3188648,
12/7/11.
ROSSERBRIGHT LLC, $626.01,
CASE #3185344, 11/22/11.
MARTHA BLACKADAR CPA PC,
$134.21, CASE #3186914, 12/1/11.
HONDACURRA SERVICE REPAIR
CORP, $2405.29, CASE #3185929,
11/28/11.
LEADING EDGE TEK LLC, $139.83,
CASE #3187896, 12/5/11.
DAR RIC RESTURANTS LLC, $682,
CASE #3187469, 12/2/11.
LOGIC WINDOW SYSTEMS LLC,
$3754, CASE #3187473, 12/2/11.
EXOTIC BODIES BY JIM LLC,
$2911.39, CASE #3188832, 12/7/11.
EVANGERS DOG CAT FOOD CO,
$675.43, CASE #3187894, 12/5/11.
#3185925, 11/28/11.
WEST END GARDNER INC, $1936,
CASE #3187475, 12/2/11.
BK MEDIA GROUP INC, $1663.86,
CASE #3187897, 12/5/11.
OYSTER BAY WINES USA LTD,
$1577.23, CASE #3186658,
11/30/11.
ELTRON RESEARCH INC,
$1516.58, CASE #3186267,
11/29/11.
BOULDER GREENS LLC, $1387,
CASE #3187476, 12/2/11.
REEF PIANO BAR GRILL INC,
$1360.94, CASE #3189144, 12/8/11.
KARLIL INC IDEAS UNLIMITED INT, $1356, CASE #3187474,
12/2/11.
LEAVES ENTERPRISES INC,
$1282.17, CASE #3186659,
11/30/11.
MOUNT COMFORT CLIMATE SYSTEMS, $1202.94, CASE #3186266,
11/29/11.
GERRY A LYNCH LTD, $1003.03,
CASE #3186269, 11/29/11.
HAWKINS CO CPAS LLC, $905.62,
CASE #3185621, 11/23/11.
EL RODEO NIGHT CLUB, $845.89,
CASE #3186271, 11/29/11.
MATRIX DISPLAY SYSTEMS INC,
$813, CASE #3187472, 12/2/11.
JAMES BRENNAN PC, $796.48,
CASE #3187945, 12/5/11.
BOB SILK AGENCY, $796.17, CASE
#3189145, 12/8/11.
APPLIED KINESIOLOGICAL
GROUP P, $777.58, CASE
#3186268, 11/29/11.
State tax liens
Boulder County
HAMILTON SHEPHERD INC,
$771.03, CASE #3185622, 11/23/11.
SAGE AUTOMOTIVE MANAGEMENT INC, $16345.62, CASE
#3185930, 11/28/11.
INTERSERVICE FIN SOLUTIONS
INC, $723.6, CASE #3185349,
11/22/11.
MIDTOWN CAFE INC, $8008, CASE
#3187471, 12/2/11.
SATTPRO INC, $707.7, CASE
Seller: THEODORE J MALLON
Buyer, buyer’s address: DAVID T &
PAMELA J PURE, 6359 SNOWBERRY LN, NIWOT, CO 80503-7146
Address: 6359 SNOWBERRY LN,
NIWOT, 80503-7146
Price: $3000000
Date closed: 11/14/11
Seller: DION BROTHERS MERCANTILE LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: 1812 BOXELDER LLC, 1512 LARIMER ST STE
325, DENVER, CO 80202-1644
Address: 1812 BOXELDER ST, LOUISVILLE, 80027-3008
Price: $1850000
Date closed: 11/21/11
Seller: KARLIN BOULDER LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: WEI
WALNUT LLC, 4745 PO BOX 249,
LAFAYETTE, CO 80026-0249
Address: 4745 WALNUT ST, BOULDER, 80301-2587
Price: $1725000
Date closed: 11/28/11
Seller: BOULDER UNIVERSITY HILL
REDEVE
Buyer, buyer’s address: 20TH
STREET APARTMENTS 1 LLC, 1064
PO BOX 271028, LOUISVILLE, CO
80027-5018
Address: 1064 13TH ST, BOULDER,
80302-7306
Price: $1600000
Date closed: 10/13/11
Seller: RALPH S GREGORY
Buyer, buyer’s address: DIANE M
& JULIAN H ASTLEY, 3613 SUNSHINE CANYON DR, BOULDER, CO
80302-9777
Address: 3613 SUNSHINE CANYON
DR, BOULDER, 80302-9777
Price: $1485000
Date closed: 11/4/11
Seller: KEN BOENISH
Buyer, buyer’s address: P K & JULIE
BALA, 6454 LEGEND RIDGE TRL,
NIWOT, CO 80503-7187
Address: 6454 LEGEND RIDGE TRL,
NIWOT, 80503-7187
Price: $1428700
Date closed: 11/22/11
Seller: RONALD EUGENE MANKA
REVOCABLE
Buyer, buyer’s address: JONATHAN
R BALCK, 875 11TH ST, BOULDER,
CO 80302-7514
Address: 875 11TH ST, BOULDER,
80302-7514
Price: $1100000
Date closed: 11/17/11
Seller: MERIDIAN CO
Buyer, buyer’s address: WILLIAM C
BENDER, 250 PEARL ST, BOULDER,
CO 80302-4927
Address: 5440 ARAPAHOE AVE,
BOULDER, 80303-1229
Price: $1020000
Date closed: 11/17/11
Seller: WILLIAM T & SARAH UNGER
Buyer, buyer’s address: ALEX &
JENNIFER STERLING, 1341 N TEAL
CT, BOULDER, CO 80303-1479
Address: 1341 N TEAL CT, BOUL-
DER, 80303-1479
Price: $879000
Date closed: 11/4/11
Seller: DENISE SEMANDS SUTTLES
REVOCAB
Buyer, buyer’s address: BARBARA
& LEWIS BARSKY, 812 WALNUT ST
APT F, BOULDER, CO 80302-5076
Address: 812 WALNUT ST APT F,
BOULDER, 80302-5076
Price: $850000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: CUNNINGHAM FARMS INC
Buyer, buyer’s address: DONALD
L & MARY GAIL COMPTON, 5731
STONEWAY TRL, NASHVILLE, TN
37209-4556
Address: 3951 BROADWAY, BOULDER, 80304
Price: $800300
Date closed: 11/17/11
Seller: KATHLEEN S SULLIVAN
Buyer, buyer’s address: JOSEPH W
& DONNA L EISELE, 5438 PARADISE
LN, FORT COLLINS, CO 80526-4325
Address: 181 ROCKLEDGE CIR,
LYONS, 80540-8934
Price: $725000
Date closed: 11/23/11
Seller: MARY B GRUTHOFF
Buyer, buyer’s address: JOHN
M & KATRINA J GVAZDINSKAS,
5311 HIGHLANDS DR, NIWOT, CO
80503-8014
Address: 5311 HIGHLANDS DR,
NIWOT, 80503-8014
Price: $723500
Date closed: 11/7/11
Seller: JANET O & MARK W HEALY
Buyer, buyer’s address: BETH B
ZARIAN, 600 E HEARTSTRONG ST,
SUPERIOR, CO 80027-8128
Address: 600 E HEARTSTRONG ST,
SUPERIOR, 80027-8128
Price: $714000
Date closed: 11/17/11
Seller: NANCY A CROCKETT
Buyer, buyer’s address: JULIA L
PANCOE, 973 GRANT PL, BOULDER, CO 80302-7116
Address: 1025 MAXWELL AVE,
BOULDER, 80304-4130
Price: $712000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: MARK SPIEGEL
Buyer, buyer’s address: BARBARA
& AARON DEHNE, 608 W WILLOW
ST, LOUISVILLE, CO 80027-1030
Address: 608 W WILLOW ST, LOUISVILLE, 80027-1030
Price: $710000
Date closed: 11/17/11
Seller: SONYA GARY
Buyer, buyer’s address: MICHELLE
I ESTRELLA WOLF, 2400 KENWOOD
DR, BOULDER, CO 80305-5235
Address: 2400 KENWOOD DR,
BOULDER, 80305-5235
Price: $700000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: ROBERT J & KATHLEEN A
BOONE
Buyer, buyer’s address: EDWARD
R & ANN M ARLING, 2978 PO BOX
1536, LYONS, CO 80540-1536
Address: 601 1/2 INDIAN LOOKOUT
RD, LYONS, 80540
Price: $700000
Date closed: 11/28/11
Seller: TRINH TU LIEN LOI
Buyer, buyer’s address: 808 MAIN
LLC, 808 MAIN ST, LOUISVILLE, CO
80027-1832
Address: 808 MAIN ST, LOUISVILLE,
80027-1832
Price: $690000
Date closed: 11/15/11
Seller: WALLACE H CAMPBELL
REVOCABLE T
Buyer, buyer’s address: STEPHEN
F & LYNDA J MCCORMICK, 3030
GALENA WAY, BOULDER, CO
80305-7129
Address: 3030 GALENA WAY,
BOULDER, 80305-7129
Price: $675000
Date closed: 11/17/11
Seller: JERRY L MILLS
Buyer, buyer’s address: DAVID H &
MARGERY A CARNEY, 5673 AURORA PL, BOULDER, CO 80303-2949
Address: 5673 AURORA PL, BOULDER, 80303-2949
Price: $674000
Date closed: 11/15/11
Seller: CAMERON LUND DANIS
Jan. 6-19, 2012
Boulder County Business Report | www.bcbr.com
|
17A
leads
Buyer, buyer’s address: PHILIP L &
SUSAN K BROWN, 6245 OLDE STAGE
RD, BOULDER, CO 80302-3410
Address: 6245 OLDE STAGE RD,
BOULDER, 80302-3410
Price: $658000
Date closed: 11/18/11
CHINESE BAPTIST CHURCH, 5495
BASELINE RD, BOULDER, CO 803032807
Address: 5075 JAY RD, BOULDER,
80301-4348
Price: $515000
Date closed: 10/31/11
Seller: 2044 WALNUT LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: JONATHAN
& MANIPHONE HAUG, 1117 REEVES
DR, GRAND FORKS, ND 58201-5648
Address: 2042 WALNUT ST UNIT B,
BOULDER, 80302-4597
Price: $640000
Date closed: 11/10/11
Seller: MASON DYKSTRA
Buyer, buyer’s address: CHRISTIAN
A & LISA E WIELAND, 845 SAINT
ANDREWS LN, LOUISVILLE, CO
80027-9436
Address: 845 SAINT ANDREWS LN,
LOUISVILLE, 80027-9436
Price: $515000
Date closed: 11/17/11
Seller: CECILY D & PHILIP S ABEL
Buyer, buyer’s address: ROBERT R &
NANCY A FIERER, 2939 TINCUP CIR,
BOULDER, CO 80305-7182
Address: 2939 TINCUP CIR, BOULDER, 80305-7182
Price: $610000
Date closed: 11/23/11
Seller: RANDALL S & VALERIE M
HOLLIS
Buyer, buyer’s address: DAVID I &
LISA M CURTIS, 1639 STARDANCE
CIR, LONGMONT, CO 80504-8812
Address: 1639 STARDANCE CIR,
LONGMONT, 80504-8812
Price: $590500
Date closed: 11/14/11
Seller: TRACY LEIGH BLACK
Buyer, buyer’s address: LEWIS B III &
BRECKEN N JONES, 961 MONROE
WAY, SUPERIOR, CO 80027-8179
Address: 961 MONROE WAY, SUPERIOR, 80027-8179
Price: $570200
Date closed: 11/17/11
Seller: JONATHAN & JENNIFER
CHAPMAN
Buyer, buyer’s address: ANDREW P
GREENE, 3265 15TH ST, BOULDER,
CO 80304-2237
Address: 3265 15TH ST, BOULDER,
80304-2237
Price: $565000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: ISRAEL & ISREAL WILHELM
Buyer, buyer’s address: PAUL
LEVARY, 3020 CARBON PL STE 102,
BOULDER, CO 80301-6169
Address: 775 17TH ST, BOULDER,
80302-7601
Price: $560000
Date closed: 11/14/11
Seller: IVAN D & LOIS J WALKER
Buyer, buyer’s address: LYDIA ANNE
MORRONGIELLO, 18 SCHOOL LN,
LLOYD HARBOR, NY 11743-1040
Address: 8109 WILLOW BEND CT,
BOULDER, 80301-5017
Price: $550000
Date closed: 11/3/11
Seller: DENNIS E & MARCIA W HULT
Buyer, buyer’s address: ERIC T
GOLDGEIER, 365 FOX CT, BOULDER,
CO 80303-3528
Address: 365 FOX CT, BOULDER,
80303-3528
Price: $536000
Date closed: 11/10/11
Seller: DOLORES DEL AMO LYONS
Buyer, buyer’s address: CLARE K &
JAMES BRIAN NEVILLE, 700 POPLAR
AVE, BOULDER, CO 80304-1029
Address: 700 POPLAR AVE, BOULDER, 80304-1029
Price: $535000
Date closed: 11/17/11
Seller: KATHLEEN D SBARBARO
Buyer, buyer’s address: CYNTHIA M
CHRISTIANSON, 967 TERRACE CIR
S, BOULDER, CO 80304-4710
Address: 967 TERRACE CIR S, BOULDER, 80304-4710
Price: $535000
Date closed: 11/21/11
Seller: CLARK FAMILY TRUST
Buyer, buyer’s address: 11546 EAGLE
SPRINGS TRAIL LLC, 411 CAMINO
BOSQUE, BOULDER, CO 80302-9746
Address: VL, ,
Price: $520000
Date closed: 11/9/11
Seller: MARJORIE L TRUSTEE BRITT
Buyer, buyer’s address: JOHN
LEONARD GERWECK, 3084 6TH ST,
BOULDER, CO 80304-2506
Address: 3084 6TH ST, BOULDER,
80304-2506
Price: $518000
Date closed: 11/15/11
Seller: BOULDER RURAL FIRE PROTECTION
Buyer, buyer’s address: BOULDER
Seller: LAURIE LEE WACH
Buyer, buyer’s address: MARK W
HEALY, 813 INCORRIGIBLE CIR,
LONGMONT, CO 80504-7381
Address: 813 INCORRIGIBLE CIR,
LONGMONT, 80504-7381
Price: $495000
Date closed: 11/17/11
Seller: ARTHUR W III & JENNIFER L
KARSEL
Buyer, buyer’s address: JON KENNETH & NIKKI JO HEMBURY, 141
STONE CANYON DR, LYONS, CO
80540-4203
Address: 141 STONE CANYON DR,
LYONS, 80540-4203
Price: $485000
Date closed: 11/17/11
Seller: BARBARA L HODGSON
Buyer, buyer’s address: MATTHEW M
& SARAH L HAYMAN, 4436 DALLAS
PL, BOULDER, CO 80303-1117
Address: 4436 DALLAS PL, BOULDER, 80303-1117
Price: $485000
Date closed: 11/28/11
Seller: AMY SUN
Buyer, buyer’s address: MOHAMAD
ELBATAL, 3664 W TORREYS PEAK
DR, SUPERIOR, CO 80027-4642
Address: 3664 W TORREYS PEAK
DR, SUPERIOR, 80027-4642
Price: $480000
Date closed: 11/12/11
Seller: KARL G GRAGGER
Buyer, buyer’s address: BRYAN R &
NATALIE G GILBERT, 7107 JOHNSON
CIR, NIWOT, CO 80503-7508
Address: 7107 JOHNSON CIR,
NIWOT, 80503-7508
Price: $480000
Date closed: 11/28/11
Seller: AARON & BARBARA DEHNE
Buyer, buyer’s address: ROBERT W
JR ROSS, 904 REX ST, LOUISVILLE,
CO 80027-2048
Address: 904 REX ST, LOUISVILLE,
80027-2048
Price: $465000
Date closed: 11/17/11
Seller: JENNIFER C ROBINSON
Buyer, buyer’s address: ERIC
SORENSON, 5541 FLAGSTAFF RD,
BOULDER, CO 80302-9513
Address: 3295 ENDICOTT DR, BOULDER, 80305-6904
Price: $456000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: TANYA R GREATHOUSE
Buyer, buyer’s address: CHRISTOPHER DONALDSON, 7150 CHRISTOPHER CT, NIWOT, CO 80503-7668
Address: 7150 CHRISTOPHER CT,
NIWOT, 80503-7668
Price: $455000
Date closed: 11/15/11
Seller: ELI & KAREN WALLACE
Buyer, buyer’s address: DANIEL R &
KRISTEN M BRUCKNER, 204 COBBLESTONE CT, LYONS, CO 80540
Address: 204 COBBLESTONE CT,
LYONS, 80540
Price: $446000
Date closed: 11/16/11
Seller: YANPING HUANG WOLFE
Buyer, buyer’s address: ROBERT
BRYCE & LINN WILDER MUIR, 4655
7TH ST, BOULDER, CO 80304-0595
Address: 711 W SIMPSON PL, LAFAYETTE, 80026-1012
Price: $428000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: YANPING HAUNG & ARMAND
TERRENCE WOLFE
Buyer, buyer’s address: ROBERT
BRYCE & LINN WILDER MUIR, 4655
7TH ST, BOULDER, CO 80304-0595
Address: 701 W SIMPSON PL, LAFAYETTE, 80026-1012
Price: $428000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: MERITAGE HOMES COLORADO INC
Buyer, buyer’s address: JAMES
M SAVELAND, 478 JACKSON ST,
LAFAYETTE, CO 80026-9204
Address: 478 JACKSON ST, LAFAYETTE, 80026-9204
Price: $416000
Date closed: 11/29/11
Seller: MERITAGE HOMES COLORADO INC
Buyer, buyer’s address: DENNIS
R & MARCIA G SCHRAMM, 550
CHEYENNE DR, LAFAYETTE, CO
80026-9189
Address: 550 CHEYENNE DR, LAFAYETTE, 80026-9189
Price: $413000
Date closed: 11/29/11
Seller: SHERRI S & LEONARD D
TOEWS
Buyer, buyer’s address: RICHARD
E GROOVER, 1972 ELDORADO DR,
SUPERIOR, CO 80027-8212
Address: 1972 ELDORADO DR,
SUPERIOR, 80027-8212
Price: $410000
Date closed: 10/25/11
Seller: SCOTT A & LISA M CAMPBELL
Buyer, buyer’s address: RACHEL J
JUSTICE, 5328 SUN DIAL PL, BOULDER, CO 80301-3644
Address: 5328 SUN DIAL PL, BOULDER, 80301-3644
Price: $410000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: DOREEN S DAY
Buyer, buyer’s address: JASON A
& AMBER N GREVES, 47 DOE TRL,
NEDERLAND, CO 80466
Address: 47 DOE TRL, NEDERLAND,
80466
Price: $400000
Date closed: 11/28/11
Seller: SUE BUCK RESSEGUIE
Buyer, buyer’s address: DAVID &
CARRIE KEMPISTY, 52 MINEOLA CT,
BOULDER, CO 80303-4416
Address: 52 MINEOLA CT, BOULDER,
80303-4416
Price: $396000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: PATRIC N SORENSON
Buyer, buyer’s address: SUANNA JO
SCHAMPER, 479 CHEYENNE DR,
LAFAYETTE, CO 80026-9219
Address: 479 CHEYENNE DR, LAFAYETTE, 80026-9219
Price: $394200
Date closed: 11/15/11
Seller: CITYVIEW PELOTON 390 LP
Buyer, buyer’s address: RONALD T
MULLIN, 3601 ARAPAHOE AVE UNIT
305, BOULDER, CO 80303-1576
Address: 3601 ARAPAHOE AVE UNIT
305, BOULDER, 80303-1576
Price: $394000
Date closed: 11/8/11
Seller: NORTHFIELD VILLAGE RESIDENTIAL
Buyer, buyer’s address: REBECCA N
& PATRICK L JENSEN, 1020 11TH ST,
LAKEPORT, CA 95453-4106
Address: 4154 LONGVIEW LN, BOULDER, 80301-1727
Price: $389900
Date closed: 10/21/11
Seller: MARKEL HOMES CONSTRUCTION CO
Buyer, buyer’s address: JOHN W &
DEBORAH B SCOTT, 401 RAYMOND
CT, LYONS, CO 80540-3816
Address: 401 RAYMOND CT, LYONS,
80540-3816
Price: $389900
Date closed: 11/17/11
Seller: CHRISTOPHER T MEYER
Buyer, buyer’s address: MICHAEL
DAVID & RHONDA CLAUDINE LYNN,
3280 BASALT CT, SUPERIOR, CO
80027-6091
Address: 3280 BASALT CT, SUPERIOR, 80027-6091
Price: $389500
Date closed: 11/23/11
Seller: JEFFREY J GROVE
Buyer, buyer’s address: LAURIE ZIMMERMAN, 1362 LOST ANGEL RD,
BOULDER, CO 80302-9242
Address: 1362 LOST ANGEL RD,
BOULDER, 80302-9242
Price: $389000
Date closed: 11/10/11
Seller: RAFAEL ORDONEZ
Buyer, buyer’s address: CAROL G
PACE, 790 GILPIN DR, BOULDER, CO
80303-2534
Address: 790 GILPIN DR, BOULDER,
80303-2534
Price: $385000
Date closed: 11/28/11
Seller: NORMAN C & N C BURDICK
Buyer, buyer’s address: ANDREW M
AMALFITANO, 6357 CORINTH RD,
LONGMONT, CO 80503-9097
Address: 6357 CORINTH RD, LONGMONT, 80503-9097
Price: $382500
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: DWIGHT B BEAL
Buyer, buyer’s address: DAVID
SCOTT & KATIE STAPLES TOPHAM,
5828 BLUE MOUNTAIN CIR, LONGMONT, CO 80503-2710
Address: 5828 BLUE MOUNTAIN CIR,
LONGMONT, 80503-2710
Price: $375000
Date closed: 11/15/11
Seller: JUDITH ANN KIMMINAU
Buyer, buyer’s address: BREANNA
C SMITH, 332 SHERMAN ST, LONGMONT, CO 80501-5314
Address: 332 SHERMAN ST, LONGMONT, 80501-5314
Price: $375000
Date closed: 11/21/11
Seller: 3860 19TH STREET LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: DONALD P
& MARSHA VINCELETTE, 56856 HIDDEN GOLD DR, YUCCA VALLEY, CA
92284-4364
Address: 3860 19TH ST, BOULDER,
80304-1337
Price: $372000
Date closed: 11/23/11
Seller: TONY L TORRANCE
Buyer, buyer’s address: CASEY
& LANCE TALON, 4076 DAWN CT,
BOULDER, CO 80304-0984
Address: 4076 DAWN CT, BOULDER,
80304-0984
Price: $369000
Date closed: 11/14/11
Seller: KEVIN & APRYLL WILHELM
Buyer, buyer’s address: TODD LAWRENCE BLOOM, 499 BLUE LAKE TRL,
LAFAYETTE, CO 80026-3353
Address: 499 BLUE LAKE TRL,
LAFAYETTE, 80026-3353
Price: $365000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: RIVERSPOINTE DOWNTOWN
LOFTS LL
Buyer, buyer’s address: RICHARD
L HARRIS, 733 GLENARBOR CIR,
LONGMONT, CO 80504-2329
Address: 733 GLENARBOR CIR,
LONGMONT, 80504-2329
Price: $360000
Date closed: 11/25/11
Seller: RICHMOND AMERICAN
HOMES COLORA
Buyer, buyer’s address: HANS C
RICHTER, 442 GRAHAM CIR, ERIE,
CO 80516-3608
Address: 442 GRAHAM CIR, ERIE,
80516-3608
Price: $360000
Date closed: 11/23/11
Seller: ADAM J & STEPHANI VANVOLKINGBURG
Buyer, buyer’s address: KIMBERLY A
FREEMAN, 1025 SAGEBRUSH WAY,
LOUISVILLE, CO 80027-1642
Address: 1025 SAGEBRUSH WAY,
LOUISVILLE, 80027-1642
Price: $352500
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: JOHN C & BEVERLY A SEEGER
Buyer, buyer’s address: ERIC R &
SHERI M RIZNER, 2055 MARFELL CT,
ERIE, CO 80516-6528
Address: 2055 MARFELL CT, ERIE,
80516-6528
Price: $351100
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: TANYA T & JOHN D TERRION
Buyer, buyer’s address: RANDALL
LAWRENCE & CARRIE CHRISTINE
CLAUSEN, 5041 FOX HILL DR, LONGMONT, CO 80504-1330
Address: 5041 FOX HILL DR, LONGMONT, 80504-1330
Price: $343000
Date closed: 11/11/11
Seller: STEPHEN H CARR
Buyer, buyer’s address: MARY LOU
NOZISKO, 1380 BROWN CIR, BOULDER, CO 80305-6725
Address: 1380 BROWN CIR, BOULDER, 80305-6725
Price: $335500
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: ERIC T GOLDGEIER
Buyer, buyer’s address: TREVOR
ALBERT & HEATHER MICHELE
DIECK, 44 PIMA CT, BOULDER, CO
80303-3969
Address: 44 PIMA CT, BOULDER,
80303-3969
Price: $335000
Date closed: 11/14/11
Seller: MERITAGE HOMES COLO INC
Buyer, buyer’s address: ROSEMARY GIRARD & JOS BIEKER, 570
CHEYENNE DR, LAFAYETTE, CO
80026-9189
Address: 570 CHEYENNE DR, LAFAYETTE, 80026-9189
Price: $334500
Date closed: 11/28/11
Seller: RMI GROUP LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: BRIAN C
PETROFF, 911 W WILLOW ST, LOUISVILLE, CO 80027-1035
Address: 911 W WILLOW ST, LOUISVILLE, 80027-1035
Price: $332500
Date closed: 11/10/11
Seller: WELLS FARGO BANK NA
TRUSTEE
Buyer, buyer’s address: J STEPHEN
BAUMGART, 9872 MAJESTIC RD,
LONGMONT, CO 80504-7740
Address: 4446 N 109TH ST, LAFAYETTE, 80026-9660
Price: $332200
Date closed: 8/27/11
Seller: DAKOTA RIDGE VILLAGE LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: PETER MARSHALL & LORI L MARAN, 430 PIERRE
ST, BOULDER, CO 80304-4450
Address: 5324 2ND ST, BOULDER,
80304
Price: $325000
Date closed: 11/29/11
Seller: THEODORE & BONNIE
TAFOYA
Buyer, buyer’s address: SAMUEL J
PHILLIPS, 159 S POLK AVE, LOUISVILLE, CO 80027-9775
Address: 159 S POLK AVE, LOUISVILLE, 80027-9775
Price: $322600
Date closed: 11/22/11
Seller: US BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION T
Buyer, buyer’s address: ERIK C
HOFVANDER, 3 ROCKLEDGE CIR,
LYONS, CO 80540-8934
Address: 3 ROCKLEDGE CIR, LYONS,
80540-8934
Price: $310000
Date closed: 10/4/11
Seller: 2890 COLLEGE PHASE I LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: ITA & SIRAK
SHARON LAOR, 2975 LAFAYETTE DR,
BOULDER, CO 80305-7108
Address: 2810 E COLLEGE AVE UNIT
101, BOULDER, 80303-1970
Price: $310000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: 2890 COLLEGE PHASE I LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: ITA & YUVAL
LAOR, 2975 LAFAYETTE DR, BOULDER, CO 80305-7108
Address: 2870 E COLLEGE AVE UNIT
302, BOULDER, 80303-1962
Price: $310000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: 2890 COLLEGE PHASE I LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: ITA & ELAD
LAOR, 2975 LAFAYETTE DR, BOULDER, CO 80305-7108
Address: 2810 E COLLEGE AVE UNIT
110, BOULDER, 80303-1971
Price: $310000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: RICHMOND AMERICAN
HOMES COLORA
Buyer, buyer’s address: VLADIMIR
DIKY, 409 GRAHAM WAY, ERIE, CO
80516-3610
Address: 409 GRAHAM WAY, ERIE,
80516-3610
Price: $302300
Date closed: 11/28/11
Seller: CHARLES L & BERNADETTE
H SALTER
Buyer, buyer’s address: FORSBERG
LIVING TRUST, 1118 SIGNATURE CIR,
LONGMONT, CO 80504-2665
Address: 1118 SIGNATURE CIR,
LONGMONT, 80504-2665
Price: $300000
Date closed: 11/11/11
Seller: 2890 COLLEGE PHASE I LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: HERZEL &
YUVAL LAOR, 2975 LAFAYETTE DR,
BOULDER, CO 80305-7108
Address: 2870 E COLLEGE AVE UNIT
308, BOULDER, 80303-1962
Price: $299000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: 2890 COLLEGE PHASE I LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: ITA & YUVAL
LAOR, 2975 LAFAYETTE DR, BOULDER, CO 80305-7108
Address: 2830 E COLLEGE AVE UNIT
309, BOULDER, 80303-1976
Price: $299000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: 2890 COLLEGE PHASE I LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: HERZEL &
YUVAL LAOR, 2975 LAFAYETTE DR,
BOULDER, CO 80305-7108
Address: 2870 E COLLEGE AVE UNIT
305, BOULDER, 80303-1962
Price: $299000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: 2890 COLLEGE PHASE I LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: HERZEL &
ELAD LAOR, 2975 LAFAYETTE DR,
BOULDER, CO 80305-7108
Address: 2870 E COLLEGE AVE UNIT
304, BOULDER, 80303-1962
Price: $299000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: 2890 COLLEGE PHASE I LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: HERZEL &
YUVAL LAOR, 2975 LAFAYETTE DR,
BOULDER, CO 80305-7108
Address: 2870 E COLLEGE AVE UNIT
307, BOULDER, 80303-1962
Price: $299000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: 2890 COLLEGE PHASE I LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: HERZEL &
SIRAK SHARON LAOR, 2975 LAFAYETTE DR, BOULDER, CO 80305-7108
Address: 2850 E COLLEGE AVE UNIT
308, BOULDER, 80303-1957
Price: $299000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: FANNIE MAE
Buyer, buyer’s address: LENORE E &
BRIAN W KNOX, 1335 MARIGOLD CT,
LAFAYETTE, CO 80026-2857
Address: 1335 MARIGOLD CT,
LAFAYETTE, 80026-2857
Price: $297000
Date closed: 11/23/11
Seller: FEDERAL HOME LOAN MORTGAGE COR
Buyer, buyer’s address: MATTHEW
PARK, 1988 LOCHMORE DR, LONGMONT, CO 80504-2365
Address: 1988 LOCHMORE DR,
LONGMONT, 80504-2365
Price: $295000
Date closed: 9/29/11
Seller: JERRY P & LESLIE K HOWARD
Buyer, buyer’s address: ERIC G &
HOLLY B ROBINSON, 2419 MAPLEWOOD CIR E, LONGMONT, CO
80503-8154
Address: 2419 MAPLEWOOD CIR E,
LONGMONT, 80503-8154
Price: $295000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: TIEN THAN
Buyer, buyer’s address: MARTIN
COBIN, 636 W ASPEN CT, LOUISVILLE, CO 80027-9708
Address: 636 W ASPEN CT, LOUISVILLE, 80027-9708
Price: $293500
Date closed: 11/16/11
Seller: JEREMIAH RYAN
Buyer, buyer’s address: KEN KIM,
5041 PO BOX 915, BOULDER, CO
80306-0915
Address: 17 PONDEROSA DR, NEDERLAND, 80466
Price: $290000
Date closed: 11/11/11
Seller: THOMAS W DESANTIS
Buyer, buyer’s address: GLENN D &
JENNIFER S KERSHNER, 1011 SPARROW HAWK DR, LONGMONT, CO
80504-2282
Address: 1011 SPARROW HAWK DR,
LONGMONT, 80504-2282
Price: $282000
Date closed: 11/17/11
Seller: MARYSE G & DAVID J MOORE
Buyer, buyer’s address: JENIFER M
BOUGH, 3130 BELL DR, BOULDER,
CO 80301-2278
Address: 3112 BELL DR, BOULDER,
80301-2277
Price: $278500
Date closed: 11/28/11
Seller: RONALD & WENDLA THOMPSON
Buyer, buyer’s address: MICHAEL
E & TERESA L SELVAGE, 1009 E
LONGS PEAK AVE, LONGMONT, CO
80504-1319
Address: 1009 E LONGS PEAK AVE,
18A
|
Jan. 6-19, 2012 Boulder County Business Report | www.bcbr.com
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LONGMONT, 80504-1319
Price: $269000
Date closed: 11/23/11
Seller: JULIE L & ROBERT D ANNEAR
Buyer, buyer’s address: BRAD &
INEKE MUSHOVIC, 2317 MAPLETON
AVE, BOULDER, CO 80304-3753
Address: 301 BRYAN AVE, NEDERLAND, 80466-9531
Price: $267000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: M DAVID E & KAREN L MCDIVITT
Buyer, buyer’s address: JASON R &
ALINE M HOLLER, 725 HALSTEAD
RD, WILMINGTON, DE 19803-2227
Address: 2990 SHADOW CREEK DR
APT 208, BOULDER, 80303-1751
Price: $265000
Date closed: 11/10/11
Seller: RICHMOND AM HOMES
COLO INC
Buyer, buyer’s address: KUBER &
SHARDA SANGROULA, 1295 GRAHAM CIR, ERIE, CO 80516-3616
Address: 1295 GRAHAM CIR, ERIE,
80516-3616
Price: $262300
Date closed: 11/22/11
Seller: JOAN W CRAWFORD
Buyer, buyer’s address: DAVID A &
CHERYL L HAUGER, 1167 VILLAGE
CIR, ERIE, CO 80516-7031
Address: 1167 VILLAGE CIR, ERIE,
80516-7031
Price: $260000
Date closed: 11/29/11
Seller: SHAW C & MEI Y LIU
Buyer, buyer’s address: MICHAEL C
CARPENTER, 7422 CLUBHOUSE RD,
BOULDER, CO 80301-3732
Address: 7422 CLUBHOUSE RD,
BOULDER, 80301-3732
Price: $253000
Date closed: 11/29/11
Seller: SBT GILL PORTFOLIO LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: SUSSCAP
LLC, 6800 S DAWSON CIR STE 201,
ENGLEWOOD, CO 80112-4210
Address: 500 S PUBLIC RD, LAFAYETTE, 80026-2103
Price: $250000
Date closed: 11/21/11
Seller: BOULDER CREEK KINGSBRIDGE LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: ANDREI V
SMIRNOV, 1641 VENICE LN, LONGMONT, CO 80503-6958
Address: 1641 VENICE LN, LONGMONT, 80503-6958
Price: $249700
Date closed: 11/11/11
Seller: FANNIE MAE
Buyer, buyer’s address: DAVID
YATES, 840 BRIMBLE CT, ERIE, CO
80516-7253
Address: 840 BRIMBLE CT, ERIE,
80516-7253
Price: $249000
Date closed: 11/23/11
Seller: BRIAN W & LENORE KNOX
Buyer, buyer’s address: ROBERT &
TERESA SMIGELSKI, 1263 DORIC DR,
LAFAYETTE, CO 80026-1211
Address: 1263 DORIC DR, LAFAYETTE, 80026-1211
Price: $245000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: ALL J LAND RENTAL CO
Buyer, buyer’s address: WILLIS C
DALLDORF, 527 ABBEY DR, LONGMONT, CO 80504-2525
Address: 527 ABBEY DR, LONGMONT, 80504-2525
Price: $245000
Date closed: 11/22/11
Seller: JACOB W & REBECCA R
MUTZ
Buyer, buyer’s address: BRITTANY
RYAN BRAGDON, 2561 STONEWALL
LN, LAFAYETTE, CO 80026-3476
Address: 2561 STONEWALL LN,
LAFAYETTE, 80026-3476
Price: $244000
Date closed: 11/21/11
Seller: HOLLAND FAMILY TRUST
Buyer, buyer’s address: JAMES D &
CINDRA F HAMER, 1618 OTIS DR,
LONGMONT, CO 80504-1765
Address: 1618 OTIS DR, LONGMONT,
80504-1765
Price: $240000
Date closed: 11/9/11
Seller: LENNAR COLORADO LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: ALEXEY
SEMJONOVS, 1740 TREVOR CT,
LONGMONT, CO 80501-9712
Address: 1740 TREVOR CT, LONGMONT, 80501-9712
Price: $239900
Date closed: 11/7/11
Seller: BARBARA WEBER DENEEVE
Buyer, buyer’s address: GARY R &
ANNE M SCHAFER, 635 PRATT ST,
LONGMONT, CO 80501-4931
Address: 635 PRATT ST, LONGMONT,
80501-4931
Price: $235000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: THOMAS A SCHMIDT
Buyer, buyer’s address: THOMAS Q
& ANDREA E WILLIAMS, 269 ELDORADO SPRINGS DR, ELDORADO
SPRINGS, CO 80025
Address: 269 ELDORADO SPRINGS
DR, ELDORADO SPRINGS, 80025
Price: $230000
Date closed: 11/15/11
Seller: DOROTHY C GREENWALD
Buyer, buyer’s address: NANCY L &
MICHAEL W UDOW, 2637 ELMHURST
CIR, LONGMONT, CO 80503-2352
Address: 2637 ELMHURST CIR,
LONGMONT, 80503-2352
Price: $230000
Date closed: 11/29/11
Seller: EDWARD SHURE
Buyer, buyer’s address: ALEXANDER
JOHN & CHRISTEL GISELE MARKEVICH, 5570 MAGNOLIA DR, NEDERLAND, CO 80466
Address: 5570 MAGNOLIA DR, NEDERLAND, 80466
Price: $225000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: ONE GUNBARREL LTD
Buyer, buyer’s address: KATHRYN
LEHR, 82 PINE NEEDLE RD, BOULDER, CO 80304-0436
Address: 6395 GUNPARK DR STE H,
BOULDER, 80301-3376
Price: $220000
Date closed: 11/28/11
Seller: BANK NEW YORK MELLON
TRUSTEE
Buyer, buyer’s address: AMY L &
GREGORY J PAYNE, 1020 COLLYER
ST, LONGMONT, CO 80501-4328
Address: 732 HAYDEN CT, LONGMONT, 80503-7002
Price: $137000
Date closed: 11/9/11
Seller: PACIFIC AVENUE PROPERTIES LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: WILLIAM F &
WHITEDOVE GANNON, 324 JUDSON
ST, LONGMONT, CO 80501-4815
Address: 324 JUDSON ST, LONGMONT, 80501-4815
Price: $210000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: BRIAN G & TINA L SELZLER
Buyer, buyer’s address: ELIJAH
DINESH & KAREN K MARTIEN, 4328
ROUS ST, SAN DIEGO, CA 921222631
Address: 1510 MONARCH DR,
LONGMONT, 80504-8788
Price: $175000
Date closed: 11/23/11
Seller: MARGARET J WILSON
Buyer, buyer’s address: DEBRA L
LINGLE, 2911 WHITETAIL CIR, LAFAYETTE, CO 80026-7002
Address: 2911 WHITETAIL CIR,
LAFAYETTE, 80026-7002
Price: $205000
Date closed: 11/28/11
Seller: CRAIG A & LORIE L MARTELL
Buyer, buyer’s address: K R JR
LAMPTON, 5665 S HARLAN ST,
LITTLETON, CO 80123-0898
Address: 3638 RIVERSIDE DR,
LYONS, 80540-8978
Price: $174000
Date closed: 11/21/11
Seller: MALLORY & LONELL N PILGRIM
Buyer, buyer’s address: MARTINEZ
FAMILY LIVING TRUST, 1733 POLO
DR, DENVER, CO 80204
Address: 1419 RED MOUNTAIN DR
UNIT 91, LONGMONT, 80504-8766
Price: $133000
Date closed: 11/15/11
Seller: ABBAS RAJABI
Buyer, buyer’s address: YUANA R
DIAZ, 50 PO BOX 1008, BOULDER,
CO 80306-1008
Address: 50 S BOULDER CIR # 31,
BOULDER, 80303-4289
Price: $204500
Date closed: 11/14/11
Seller: JOHN W SCOTT
Buyer, buyer’s address: MELISSA
FRANKWILLIAMS, 183 PHEASANT
RUN, LOUISVILLE, CO 80027-4304
Address: 183 PHEASANT RUN, LOUISVILLE, 80027-4304
Price: $172500
Date closed: 11/23/11
Seller: VIRGINIA M POLLOCK
Buyer, buyer’s address: HEATHER
DIANE KIRKPATRICK, 432 MARTIN ST,
LONGMONT, CO 80501-5662
Address: 432 MARTIN ST, LONGMONT, 80501-5662
Price: $129000
Date closed: 11/16/11
Seller: ISABEL M MONTEZ
Buyer, buyer’s address: DOUGLAS E
& NICOLE KENNEDY, 306 W CANNON
ST, LAFAYETTE, CO 80026-1610
Address: 306 W CANNON ST, LAFAYETTE, 80026-1610
Price: $203000
Date closed: 11/10/11
Seller: DAVID M & ARIL D LOWRY
Buyer, buyer’s address: SAMUEL
HEWITT, 2902 SHADOW CREEK DR
APT 206, BOULDER, CO 80303-1780
Address: 2902 SHADOW CREEK DR
APT 206, BOULDER, 80303-1780
Price: $170000
Date closed: 11/16/11
Seller: US BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION T
Buyer, buyer’s address: BRIAN JENSEN, 405 E 4TH AVE, LONGMONT, CO
80504-6006
Address: 405 E 4TH AVE, LONGMONT, 80504-6006
Price: $127500
Date closed: 9/26/11
Seller: TANI C NEWELL
Buyer, buyer’s address: ERIK &
DAWN BURGARDT, 303 W BROME
AVE, LAFAYETTE, CO 80026-1747
Address: 303 W BROME AVE, LAFAYETTE, 80026-1747
Price: $201500
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: MICHAEL J FARINA
Buyer, buyer’s address: CHRISTOPHER DOWNHAM, 2201 PO BOX 221,
BOULDER, CO 80306-0221
Address: 2201 PEARL ST APT 101,
BOULDER, 80302-4624
Price: $170000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: JOE M & HEATHER A GARVERT
Buyer, buyer’s address: BRANDON D
BOBIAN, 1 ANCHORAGE CT, LONGMONT, CO 80504-1204
Address: 1 ANCHORAGE CT, LONGMONT, 80504-1204
Price: $200000
Date closed: 11/29/11
Seller: GREG & AMY PAYNE
Buyer, buyer’s address: JESSICA
FLANNERY, 1859 DONOVAN DR,
LONGMONT, CO 80501-4773
Address: 1859 DONOVAN DR, LONGMONT, 80501-4773
Price: $166000
Date closed: 11/29/11
Seller: TAMARA H WENDT
Buyer, buyer’s address: LARRY &
JANICE STURGEON, 4383 PEACH CT,
BOULDER, CO 80301-1744
Address: 4714 EDISON LN, BOULDER, 80301-2266
Price: $220000
Date closed: 11/23/11
Seller: RONALD D & MARJORIE J
CROWE
Buyer, buyer’s address: DUSTIN J
& KATHERINE D HIGGINBOTHAM,
1520 S VIVIAN ST, LONGMONT, CO
80501-6733
Address: 1520 S VIVIAN ST, LONGMONT, 80501-6733
Price: $199000
Date closed: 11/23/11
Seller: JANEEN R HILL
Buyer, buyer’s address: AIMEE D
MARCELO, 699 RIDGE RD, GOLDEN,
CO 80403-1933
Address: 2855 ROCK CREEK CIR
UNIT 253, SUPERIOR, 80027-4621
Price: $215000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: FRANCEA L PHILLIPS
Buyer, buyer’s address: PHILIP G
JUDGE, 3712 OAKWOOD DR, LONGMONT, CO 80503-7510
Address: 3712 OAKWOOD DR,
LONGMONT, 80503-7510
Price: $192500
Date closed: 11/23/11
Seller: STEPHEN & ELEANOR WEDDIG
Buyer, buyer’s address: JOEL &
SUSAN WEDDIG, 15 ABBOTT RD,
WALTHAM, MA 02452-7814
Address: 702 W BROME PL, LAFAYETTE, 80026-1792
Price: $214900
Date closed: 11/10/11
Seller: GERALD & MICHELLE L
MURAWSKI
Buyer, buyer’s address: VANNA
SOK, 505 PINE ST, FREDERICK, CO
80530-8038
Address: 255 BUTLER CT, LONGMONT, 80504-1515
Price: $190000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: BMB BUILDERS INC
Buyer, buyer’s address: PATRICIA A
ARTHUR, 699 WINTON WY, LAFAYETTE, CO 80026
Address: 699 WINTON WY, LAFAYETTE, 80026
Price: $214000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: HOLLY LOMME
Buyer, buyer’s address: JASON &
KATEY MERRILL, 1301 ALPINE ST,
LONGMONT, CO 80504-3047
Address: 1301 ALPINE ST, LONGMONT, 80504-3047
Price: $189000
Date closed: 11/28/11
Seller: MARY RISARD
Buyer, buyer’s address: ANGAYARKANNI RAVISANKAR, 4695 16TH ST,
BOULDER, CO 80304-2262
Address: 4695 16TH ST, BOULDER,
80304-2262
Price: $212600
Date closed: 11/10/11
Seller: NAOMI HORII
Buyer, buyer’s address: JARRETT
TISHMACK, 103 W CANNON ST,
LAFAYETTE, CO 80026-1605
Address: 103 W CANNON ST, LAFAYETTE, 80026-1605
Price: $186000
Date closed: 11/28/11
Seller: ELIZABETH POLIZZI
Buyer, buyer’s address: JUSTIN
KRAEGEL, 2250 SPRUCE ST APT B,
BOULDER, CO 80302-4775
Address: 2250 SPRUCE ST APT B,
BOULDER, 80302-4775
Price: $212000
Date closed: 11/23/11
Seller: STEVE R CONDER
Buyer, buyer’s address: PHILLIP W &
CAROL CAMPBELL, 1111 VIVIAN ST,
LONGMONT, CO 80501-3731
Address: 1111 VIVIAN ST, LONGMONT, 80501-3731
Price: $178500
Date closed: 11/16/11
Seller: MARTIN SKOTNICKI
Buyer, buyer’s address: DUANE &
VALARIE WHITE, 1435 MISSOURI
AVE, LONGMONT, CO 80501-6724
Address: 26 15TH AVE, LONGMONT,
80501-3443
Price: $155000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: WELLS FARGO BANK NA
TRUSTEE
Buyer, buyer’s address: PAUL W
& SUZANNE F POMEROY, 760
GATEWAY CIR, LAFAYETTE, CO
80026-2625
Address: 760 GATEWAY CIR, LAFAYETTE, 80026-2625
Price: $155000
Date closed: 11/3/11
Seller: PETER MICHAEL GAMBON
Buyer, buyer’s address: SCOTT
HINCK, 2227 CANYON BLVD APT
210A, BOULDER, CO 80302-5635
Address: 2227 CANYON BLVD APT
210A, BOULDER, 80302-5635
Price: $152000
Date closed: 11/28/11
Seller: FANNIE MAE
Buyer, buyer’s address: MARK &
CHARLES ASCHWANDEN, 212
WRIGHT ST APT 109, LAKEWOOD,
CO 80228-1400
Address: 302 BRAMER RD, WARD,
80481-9507
Price: $150300
Date closed: 11/17/11
Seller: 5920 GUNBARREL AVE LLLP
Buyer, buyer’s address: MARK T
WALKER, 4839 WHITE ROCK CIR APT
A, BOULDER, CO 80301-6721
Address: 5920 GUNBARREL AVE APT
A, BOULDER, 80301-5322
Price: $150000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: JENNIFER L ENGELMANN
Buyer, buyer’s address: RAOUF
ZAIDAN, 2877 SHADOW CREEK DR
APT 203, BOULDER, CO 80303-1736
Address: 2877 SHADOW CREEK DR
APT 203, BOULDER, 80303-1736
Price: $147000
Date closed: 11/21/11
Seller: INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT
BENEFICI
Buyer, buyer’s address: KRISTEN
HARTWIG, 229 CARDINAL WAY UNIT
A, LONGMONT, CO 80501-8527
Address: 229 CARDINAL WAY UNIT A,
LONGMONT, 80501-8527
Price: $124900
Date closed: 11/11/11
Date closed: 11/15/11
Seller: MARTHA B & LAURIE WAKEFIELD
Buyer, buyer’s address: ELIZABETH
A RABA, 4785 SHOUP PL, BOULDER,
CO 80303-2726
Address: 3240 IRIS AVE # G308,
BOULDER, 80301-1969
Price: $97500
Date closed: 11/21/11
Seller: CARUSO FAMILY PARTNERSHIP LLLP
Buyer, buyer’s address: 4801 RIVERBEND LLC, 5345 ARAPAHOE AVE STE
6, BOULDER, CO 80303-8150
Address: 5345 ARAPAHOE AVE STE
6, BOULDER, 80303-8150
Price: $90000
Date closed: 11/14/11
Seller: YARMOUTH HOUSING ALLIANCE LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: MUHAMED
HUSIC, 1707 YARMOUTH AVE UNIT
107, BOULDER, CO 80304-4301
Address: 1707 YARMOUTH AVE UNIT
107, BOULDER, 80304-4301
Price: $89900
Date closed: 11/21/11
Seller: CREATIVE ESTATES LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: SCOTT
MALTZAHN, 1326 WOODS LANDING
DR, FORT COLLINS, CO 80525-4295
Address: 520 COLLYER ST, LONGMONT, 80501-5543
Price: $85000
Date closed: 11/28/11
Seller: FANNIE MAE
Buyer, buyer’s address: MARY CATHERINE WYNNE, 1070 W CENTURY DR
STE 101, LOUISVILLE, CO 80027-1657
Address: 12 E 5TH AVE, LONGMONT,
80504-1414
Price: $74500
Date closed: 11/29/11
Seller: NEW CENTURY HOME
EQUITY LOAN T
Buyer, buyer’s address: JUAN G
MOLINA, 1019 GAY ST, LONGMONT,
CO 80501-4312
Address: 1019 GAY ST, LONGMONT,
80501-4312
Price: $121000
Date closed: 10/26/11
Seller: SVERRE JENSEN
Buyer, buyer’s address: REI CAPITAL
LLC, 510 PO BOX 3518, BOULDER,
CO 80307-3518
Address: 510 E SIMPSON ST, LAFAYETTE, 80026-2330
Price: $73500
Date closed: 9/17/11
Seller: JEANNINE L FICHTER
Buyer, buyer’s address: GERARDO
MEZA, 790 W CLEVELAND CIR,
LAFAYETTE, CO 80026-1011
Address: 790 W CLEVELAND CIR,
LAFAYETTE, 80026-1011
Price: $118500
Date closed: 10/28/11
Seller: 330 ATWOOD LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: LEWIS A &
JOANN EMBREE, 338 ATWOOD ST,
LONGMONT, CO 80501-5515
Address: 330 ATWOOD ST, LONGMONT, 80501-5515
Price: $73000
Date closed: 11/17/11
Seller: H CLIFTON JR GOTTWALS
Buyer, buyer’s address: STEPHEN
E & MARY C EMERSON, 408 PERRY
DR, MORRSETOWN, NJ 8057
Address: 4682 WHITE ROCK CIR APT
5, BOULDER, 80301-6712
Price: $115000
Date closed: 11/21/11
Seller: WELLS FARGO BANK
Buyer, buyer’s address: FEDERAL
NATIONAL MORTGAGE ASSO, 14221
DALLAS PKWY STE 1000, DALLAS,
TX 75254-2946
Address: 80 MAIN ST, PINECLIFFE,
80471
Price: $55300
Date closed: 11/10/11
Seller: FEDERAL HOME LOAN MORTGAGE COR
Buyer, buyer’s address: ABW REOS
LLC, 1720 S BELLAIRE ST STE 1100,
DENVER, CO 80222-4335
Address: 727 HUBBARD DR, LONGMONT, 80504-1531
Price: $114000
Date closed: 11/4/11
Seller: JANE E RAUSCHER
Buyer, buyer’s address: DANIEL
P GLYNN, 2510 TAFT DR APT 314,
BOULDER, CO 80302-7852
Address: 2510 TAFT DR APT 314,
BOULDER, 80302-7852
Price: $113500
Date closed: 11/17/11
Seller: JAMES D ZITO
Buyer, buyer’s address: DAWA L
LAMA, 2557 LEXINGTON ST, LAFAYETTE, CO 80026-3413
Address: 2557 LEXINGTON ST,
LAFAYETTE, 80026-3413
Price: $105000
Date closed: 11/10/11
Seller: AURORA LOAN SERVICES
LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: PACTOLUS
LLC, 1613 MARSHALL RD, BOULDER,
CO 80305-7333
Address: 1180 MILO CIR APT A,
LAFAYETTE, 80026-3070
Price: $104500
Seller: KITTY J CHERENKO
Buyer, buyer’s address: PETER WARRINER & NISSA LYNN WALKE, 519 E
YA PAST, COLO SPGS, CO 80903
Address: 23602 PEAK PEAK HWY,
NEDERLAND, 80466
Price: $52500
Date closed: 11/30/11
Seller: EASTGATE DEVELOPMENT
LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: BOULDER
CREEK SHADOWGRASS LLC, 3000
PEARL ST STE 101, BOULDER, CO
80301-2431
Address: 1433 MOONLIGHT DR,
LONGMONT, 80504-1758
Price: $50000
Date closed: 11/30/11
Seller: EASTGATE DEVELOPMENT
LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: BOULDER
CREEK SHADOWGRASS LLC, 3000
PEARL ST STE 101, BOULDER, CO
80301-2431
Address: 1441 MOONLIGHT DR,
LONGMONT, 80504-1758
Price: $50000
Date closed: 11/30/11
Seller: MELVINA HILL ROAC LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: MADELEINE
LEVAGGI, 1830 HORSE CREEK RD,
KLAMATH RIVER, CA 96050-9012
Jan. 6-19, 2012
Boulder County Business Report | www.bcbr.com
|
19A
leads
Address: 450 MELVINA HILL RD,
BOULDER, 80302-9703
Price: $27700
Date closed: 11/23/11
Seller: JOHN D & MARTHA L CARTER
Buyer, buyer’s address: MARTIN
PALOMARES, 1238 FALL RIVER CIR,
LONGMONT, CO 80504-8776
Address: 318 CARTER LN, LONGMONT, 80501-8664
Price: $25000
Date closed: 11/29/11
Seller: EDWARD SHURE
Buyer, buyer’s address: DAVID H &
DEBRA JONES, 4890 MAGNOLIA DR,
NEDERLAND, CO 80466-9607
Address:
Price: $4500
Date closed: 10/31/11
Seller: CATHERINE P N & JOSEPH A
T BOND
Buyer, buyer’s address: BOULDER
CITY OF, 1296 PO BOX 791, BOULDER, CO 80306-0791
Address: 1296 AIKINS WAY, BOULDER, 80305-6700
Date closed: 11/7/11
Seller: ELIZABETH ARMSTRONG
Buyer, buyer’s address: LIZ ARMSTRONG TRUST, 1114 COUNTY
ROAD 137, GLENWOOD SPRINGS,
CO 81601-9767
Address: 367 PEARL ST, BOULDER,
80302-4928
Date closed: 11/8/11
Seller: DALE W & EDNA L BUYSSE
Buyer, buyer’s address: DALE W
BUYSSE EDNA L BUYSSE RE, 1379
CHARLES DR APT A1, LONGMONT,
CO 80503-2361
Address: 1379 CHARLES DR APT A1,
LONGMONT, 80503-2361
Date closed: 10/18/11
Seller: BRIAN J MENTEL
Buyer, buyer’s address: BRIAN J &
MARTA K MENTEL, 1760 MACCULLEN DR, ERIE, CO 80516-7551
Address: 1760 MACCULLEN DR,
ERIE, 80516-7551
Date closed: 11/11/11
Seller: MATTHEW BINGER
Buyer, buyer’s address: 1913 ARAPAHOE AVENUE LLC, 881 GAPTER RD,
BOULDER, CO 80303-2920
Address: 1913 ARAPAHOE AVE,
BOULDER, 80302-6510
Date closed: 11/14/11
Seller: MICHAEL WOOD
Buyer, buyer’s address: WOOD BINGER LLC, 881 GAPTER RD, BOULDER, CO 80303-2920
Address: 756 19TH ST, BOULDER,
80302-7610
Date closed: 10/14/11
Seller: ERIN M AITKEN
Buyer, buyer’s address: EDWARD T
AITKEN, 1921 CARR DR, LONGMONT,
CO 80501-1816
Address: 1921 CARR DR, LONGMONT, 80501-1816
Date closed: 11/9/11
Seller: STRONG WALLS LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: STEPHEN D
& TRACEY H STEFFEK, 14497 GOLD
HILL RD, BOULDER, CO 80302-9770
Address: 1835 BASELINE RD, BOULDER, 80302-7643
Date closed: 11/8/11
Seller: JUDITH JOHNSTON
Buyer, buyer’s address: JUDITH
JOHNSTON LIVING TRUST, 11153
DOBBINS RUN, LAFAYETTE, CO
80026-9680
Address: 11153 DOBBINS RUN,
LAFAYETTE, 80026-9680
Date closed: 5/20/11
Seller: CARRIE JANE SINGLETON
Buyer, buyer’s address: CARRIE
JANE SINGLETON TRUST, 672 TANTRA DR, BOULDER, CO 80305-6183
Address: 672 TANTRA DR, BOULDER,
80305-6183
Date closed: 11/8/11
Seller: RIDGELINE DEVELOPMENT
CORP
Buyer, buyer’s address: MARKEL
HOMES CONSTRUCTION CO, 5723
ARAPAHOE AVE STE B2, BOULDER,
CO 80303-1381
Address: 616 PORTSIDE CT, LAFAY-
ETTE, 80026-1294
Date closed: 11/16/11
Seller: ANDREA PAPPAS & DAVID
BENTON MERRILL
Buyer, buyer’s address: ANDREA P
& DAVID B MERRILL, 3351 SENTINEL
DR, BOULDER, CO 80301-5474
Address: 3300 BRIDGER TRL APT
107, BOULDER, 80301-1926
Date closed: 11/16/11
Seller: ANDREA P & DAVID B MERRILL
Buyer, buyer’s address: ANDREA P
& DAVID B MERRILL, 3351 SENTINEL
DR, BOULDER, CO 80301-5474
Address: 1846 MOUNT SNEFFELS
ST, LONGMONT, 80504-2063
Date closed: 11/16/11
Seller: ANDREA PAPPAS & DAVID
BENTON MERRILL
Buyer, buyer’s address: ANDREA P
& DAVID B MERRILL, 3351 SENTINEL
DR, BOULDER, CO 80301-5474
Address: 3351 SENTINEL DR, BOULDER, 80301-5474
Date closed: 11/16/11
Seller: MURIEL M WOOD
Buyer, buyer’s address: MURIEL M
WOOD LIVING TRUST, 726 HAYS CIR,
LONGMONT, CO 80504-1338
Address: 6048 FOX HILL DR, LONGMONT, 80504-1350
Date closed: 11/15/11
Seller: JOANNE TRUSTEE &
SUSANNE TRUSTEE VARLESE
Buyer, buyer’s address: ANTHONY
L MANIACI ADMINISTRATI, 3190
EASTWOOD CT, BOULDER, CO
80304-2962
Address: 1410 CRETE CT # C 6,
LAFAYETTE, 80026-3510
Date closed: 11/12/11
Seller: ANTHONY L MANIACI ADMINISTRATI
Buyer, buyer’s address: KATHRYN
A VARLESE, 4790 MCKINLEY DR,
BOULDER, CO 80303-1125
Address: 1410 CRETE CT # C 6,
LAFAYETTE, 80026-3510
Date closed: 11/12/11
Seller: CENTRAL MORTGAGE CO
Buyer, buyer’s address: DEUTSCHE
BANK NATIONAL TRUST C, 801 JOHN
BARROW RD STE 1, LITTLE ROCK,
AR 72205-6599
Address: 1375 N 111TH ST, LAFAYETTE, 80026-3451
Date closed: 11/9/11
Seller: KENNETH BEVERLY JONES
LIVING T
Buyer, buyer’s address: LONNIE C
JONES, 17279 ST VRAIN DR, LYONS,
CO 80540
Address: 17279 ST VRAIN DR,
LYONS, 80540
Date closed: 11/3/11
Seller: ANNETTE S & THOMAS V
KISSINGER
Buyer, buyer’s address: ANNETTE S
KISSINGER, 1733 NORWOOD AVE,
BOULDER, CO 80304-1217
Address: 1733 NORWOOD AVE,
BOULDER, 80304-1217
Date closed: 11/16/11
Seller: CHARLES N HOFFMAN
Buyer, buyer’s address: 2337 GOSS
LLC, 725 INCA PKWY, BOULDER, CO
80303-2604
Address: 2337 GOSS ST, BOULDER,
80302-6613
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: CITIMORTGAGE INC
Buyer, buyer’s address: WELLS
FARGO BANK MINNESOTA NAT, 1000
TECHNOLOGY DR, O FALLON, MO
63368-2240
Address: 924 POPE DR, ERIE, 805166530
Date closed: 11/9/11
Seller: LYONS VALLEY LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: MARKEL
HOMES CONSTR CO, 5723 ARAPAHOE AVE STE B2, BOULDER, CO
80303-1381
Address: 421 RAYMOND CT, LYONS,
80540-3816
Date closed: 11/17/11
Seller: FRANCES C DALTON
Buyer, buyer’s address: FRANCES
C DALTON TRUST, 30 BUCKTHORN
WAY, HILLSBOROUGH, CA 940106524
Address: 3921 PASEO DEL PRADO
ST, BOULDER, 80301-1549
Date closed: 11/17/11
Seller: WELLS FARGO BANK NATIONAL ASSO
Buyer, buyer’s address: WELLS
FARGO BANK MINNESOTA, 3476
STATEVIEW BLVD, FORT MILL, SC
29715-7203
Address: 167 CONIFER DR, NEDERLAND, 80466-9705
Date closed: 11/15/11
Seller: HUD
Buyer, buyer’s address: ACTIVE
INVEST LLC, 655 S SUNSET ST STE
D, LONGMONT, CO 80501-6373
Address: 1419 RED MOUNTAIN DR
UNIT 53, LONGMONT, 80504-8753
Date closed: 11/22/11
Seller: GEORGE PHILIP FOX
Buyer, buyer’s address: GEORGE
PHILIP & VIRGINIA BANKS FOX, 997
GLENARBOR CIR, LONGMONT, CO
80504-2331
Address: 997 GLENARBOR CIR,
LONGMONT, 80504-2331
Date closed: 11/17/11
Seller: RYLAND GROUP INC
Buyer, buyer’s address: EDWARD D
JR BRUDER, 113 EAGLE VALLEY DR,
LYONS, CO 80540-4208
Address: 113 EAGLE VALLEY DR,
LYONS, 80540-4208
Date closed: 11/22/11
Seller: AUBREY CLINT FOLSOM
Buyer, buyer’s address: 932 15TH
LLC, 1605 S ELBERT CT, SUPERIOR,
CO 80027-8007
Address: 930 15TH ST, BOULDER,
80302-7312
Date closed: 11/23/11
Seller: AUBREY CLINT FOLSOM
Buyer, buyer’s address: 936 15TH
LLC, 1605 S ELBERT CT, SUPERIOR,
CO 80027-8007
Address: 936 15TH ST, BOULDER,
80302-7312
Date closed: 11/23/11
Seller: AUBREY CLINT FOLSOM
Buyer, buyer’s address: 969 15TH
LLC, 1605 S ELBERT CT, SUPERIOR,
CO 80027-8007
Address: 969 15TH ST, BOULDER,
80302-7376
Date closed: 11/23/11
Seller: AUBREY CLINT FOLSOM
Buyer, buyer’s address: 975 PLEASANT LLC, 1605 S ELBERT CT, SUPERIOR, CO 80027-8007
Address: 975 PLEASANT ST, BOULDER, 80302-6937
Date closed: 11/23/11
Seller: AUBREY CLINT FOLSOM
Buyer, buyer’s address: 951 15TH
LLC, 1605 S ELBERT CT, SUPERIOR,
CO 80027-8007
Address: 951 15TH ST, BOULDER,
80302-7311
Date closed: 11/23/11
Seller: FEDERAL HOME LOAN MORTGAGE COR
Buyer, buyer’s address: CLAIRE E &
DAVID M NYE, 1325 STOCKTON DR,
ERIE, CO 80516-6883
Address: 1325 STOCKTON DR, ERIE,
80516-6883
Date closed: 10/25/11
Seller: G DAVID & DEBORAH G COBB
Buyer, buyer’s address: DAVID COBB
LIVING TRUST, 2978 DUNES CT,
LONGMONT, CO 80503-7925
Address: 2978 DUNES CT, LONGMONT, 80503-7925
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: ARTHUR W & LINDA M
ANDREWS
Buyer, buyer’s address: MEREDITH L
RAY, 11742 N 59TH ST, LONGMONT,
CO 80503-9158
Address: 11742 N 59TH ST, LONGMONT, 80503-9158
Date closed: 11/28/11
Seller: GLORIA BOB ARMSTRONG
FAMILY TR
Buyer, buyer’s address: IRVING R
& GLORIA G ARMSTRONG, 6624
CHEROKEE CT, NIWOT, CO 805038655
Address: 6624 CHEROKEE CT,
NIWOT, 80503-8655
Date closed: 11/29/11
BROOMFIELD, 80020-1245
Price: $487500
Date closed: 12/5/11
Seller: RONALD W & MICHELLE L
HARVEY
Buyer, buyer’s address: RONALD W
HARVEY REVOCABLE TRUS, 2466
POWDERHORN LN, BOULDER, CO
80305-6821
Address: 1267 SCRUB OAK CIR,
BOULDER, 80305-6217
Date closed: 11/21/11
Seller: GORDON LIVING TRUST
Buyer, buyer’s address: ROBERT J
& PAMELA G SPRY, 467 RIFLE WAY,
BROOMFIELD, CO 80020-6057
Address: 467 RIFLE WAY, BROOMFIELD, 80020-6057
Price: $480000
Date closed: 11/28/11
Seller: RONALD & MICHELLE HARVEY
Buyer, buyer’s address: RONALD W
HARVEY REVOCABLE TRUS, 2466
POWDERHORN LN, BOULDER, CO
80305-6821
Address: 2466 POWDERHORN LN,
BOULDER, 80305-6821
Date closed: 11/21/11
Seller: RONALD W & MICHELLE L
HARVEY
Buyer, buyer’s address: RONALD W
HARVEY REVOCABLE TRUS, 2466
POWDERHORN LN, BOULDER, CO
80305-6821
Address: 5366 OAK TREE CT, BOULDER, 80301-3783
Date closed: 11/21/11
Seller: RONALD W & MICHELLE LYNN
HARVEY
Buyer, buyer’s address: RONALD W
HARVEY REVOCABLE TRUS, 2466
POWDERHORN LN, BOULDER, CO
80305-6821
Address: 2396 KEYSTONE CT, BOULDER, 80304-1936
Date closed: 11/26/11
Seller: HUD
Buyer, buyer’s address: THOMAS J
KOLP, 933 COLUMBIA PL, BOULDER,
CO 80303-3211
Address: 635 N GOOSEBERRY CT,
LAFAYETTE, 80026-1524
Date closed: 11/29/11
Seller: KRAFT BUILDING CONTRACTORS LLL
Buyer, buyer’s address: BOULDER
COUNTY OF, 1859 PO BOX 471,
BOULDER, CO 80306-0471
Address:
Date closed: 11/22/11
Seller: KRAFT BLDG CONTRACTORS
LLLP
Buyer, buyer’s address: BOULDER
CNTY, 1859 PO BOX 471, BOULDER,
CO 80306-0471
Address:
Date closed: 11/22/11
Seller: PNC BK
Buyer, buyer’s address: HUD, 1 S
GAY DR, LONGMONT, CO 805016653
Address: 1 S GAY DR, LONGMONT,
80501-6653
Date closed: 9/17/11
Broomfield County
Seller: MICHAEL R & AMY BAUER
Buyer, buyer’s address: JOHN P &
ANNE R BIRDSALL, 1190 LILAC ST,
BROOMFIELD, CO 80020-1042
Address: 3150 W 151ST CT, BROOMFIELD, 80023-8711
Price: $725000
Date closed: 12/2/11
Seller: DEAN A & VICTORIA R
GRASSER
Buyer, buyer’s address: BARRY S &
ELLEN D HALPERN, 16480 GRAYS
WAY, BROOMFIELD, CO 80023-8335
Address: 16480 GRAYS WAY,
BROOMFIELD, 80023-8335
Price: $640000
Date closed: 12/1/11
Seller: NICKOLAUS G & JOANN L
DEKRELL
Buyer, buyer’s address: NICOLE &
JOHN HERRING, 4920 ASPEN CREEK
DR, BROOMFIELD, CO 80023-3973
Address: 4920 ASPEN CREEK DR,
BROOMFIELD, 80023-3973
Price: $500000
Date closed: 11/30/11
Seller: HERBERT W & JANICE M
MOORE
Buyer, buyer’s address: KENNETH W
& JACQUELINE POOR HAHN, 1195
OAKHURST DR, BROOMFIELD, CO
80020-1245
Address: 1195 OAKHURST DR,
Seller: PULTE HOME CORP
Buyer, buyer’s address: KENNETH L
& JANET S PELZEL, 16053 TORREYS
WAY, BROOMFIELD, CO 80023-8135
Address: 16053 TORREYS WAY,
BROOMFIELD, 80023-8135
Price: $458000
Date closed: 11/30/11
Seller: PATRICK W WRIGHT
Buyer, buyer’s address: NATHAN P
& HOLLY J CLARK, 15006 SILVER
FEATHER CIR, BROOMFIELD, CO
80023-4609
Address: 15006 SILVER FEATHER
CIR, BROOMFIELD, 80023-4609
Price: $418000
Date closed: 11/18/11
Seller: PULTE HOME CORP
Buyer, buyer’s address: JOHN A
MAUREEN A OSWALD REVOCA,
4845 FLASH CT, BROOMFIELD, CO
80023-8131
Address: 4845 FLASH CT, BROOMFIELD, 80023-8131
Price: $393000
Date closed: 11/30/11
Seller: PULTE HOME CORP
Buyer, buyer’s address: JAMES K
OSBORNE AND JANET E OS, 16020
QUANDRY LOOP, BROOMFIELD, CO
80023-8106
Address: 16020 QUANDRY LOOP,
BROOMFIELD, 80023-8106
Price: $377000
Date closed: 11/30/11
Seller: MICHAEL F & MARY C KOTTYAN
Buyer, buyer’s address: BRIAN FALLON, 169 E 14TH CT, BROOMFIELD,
CO 80020-1213
Address: 169 E 14TH CT, BROOMFIELD, 80020-1213
Price: $345000
Date closed: 11/28/11
Seller: PARKWAY CIRCLE BROOMFIELD LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: FRANCOISE
B DIMAPOUPLAS, 13494 VIA VARRA,
BROOMFIELD, CO 80020-9785
Address: 13494 VIA VARRA, BROOMFIELD, 80020-9785
Price: $315000
Date closed: 11/30/11
Seller: SHERRY S DICKERSON
REVOCABLE T
Buyer, buyer’s address: ANDREW G
GILL, 220 WRIGHT ST APT 104, LAKEWOOD, CO 80228-1409
Address: 1081 STONEHAVEN AVE,
BROOMFIELD, 80020-2474
Price: $299000
Date closed: 11/16/11
Seller: PULTE HOME CORP
Buyer, buyer’s address: CHARLES
W & BARBARA A VANSTEEN, 15932
TORREYS WAY, BROOMFIELD, CO
80023-8125
Address: 15932 TORREYS WAY,
BROOMFIELD, 80023-8125
Price: $293200
Date closed: 12/5/11
Buyer, buyer’s address: SHEILA
A WELCH, 2942 TRINITY LOOP,
BROOMFIELD, CO 80023-4672
Address: 2942 TRINITY LOOP,
BROOMFIELD, 80023-4672
Price: $281000
Date closed: 11/30/11
Seller: GREGORY B & BEVERLY A
WEINSTEIN
Buyer, buyer’s address: MARY P &
PETER T GLATZ, 4715 RAVEN RUN,
BROOMFIELD, CO 80023-4636
Address: 4715 RAVEN RUN, BROOMFIELD, 80023-4636
Price: $275000
Date closed: 11/28/11
Seller: CHARLES B HACKER
Buyer, buyer’s address: ALFRED H
& ANA CERNUTO, 12861 ROYAL CT,
BROOMFIELD, CO 80020-5445
Address: 12861 ROYAL CT, BROOMFIELD, 80020-5445
Price: $266700
Date closed: 11/29/11
Seller: JOHN P & ANNE R BIRDSALL
Buyer, buyer’s address: TAMARA SUE
KILLION, 1601 ARGONNE PL NW APT
209, WASHINGTON, DC 20009-5902
Address: 1190 LILAC ST, BROOMFIELD, 80020-1042
Price: $260000
Date closed: 11/28/11
Seller: MICHELLE L & JAMES V
LARSEN
Buyer, buyer’s address: LEON B &
ELLEN C BLASCO, 5105 PASADENA
WAY, BROOMFIELD, CO 80023-4029
Address: 5105 PASADENA WAY,
BROOMFIELD, 80023-4029
Price: $238000
Date closed: 11/30/11
Seller: PINNACLE GROUP LLC
Buyer, buyer’s address: BROOMFIELD CARAPACE LLC, 7100 E BELLEVIEW AVE STE 350, GREENWOOD
VILLAGE, CO 80111-1636
Address: 13249 MISTY ST, BROOMFIELD, 80020-5236
Price: $210000
Date closed: 12/2/11
Seller: JOAN & ALBERT PALLONE
Buyer, buyer’s address: BRIAN A
CORFF, 3440 17TH ST, BOULDER, CO
80304-1822
Address: 1070 IRIS ST, BROOMFIELD,
80020-1861
Price: $190000
Date closed: 12/2/11
Seller: HSBC BANK USA
Buyer, buyer’s address: JOSEPHINA
ACEVES, 105 SANDLER DR, LAFAYETTE, CO 80026-2536
Address: 596 BIRCH ST, BROOMFIELD, 80020-1541
Price: $175200
Date closed: 10/10/11
Seller: KENNETH H III CHRISTGEN
Buyer, buyer’s address: GREGORY
P & MARIETTA CIMATO ZYGAJ, 8300
GREINER RD, BUFFALO, NY 142212831
Address: 12815 KING ST, BROOMFIELD, 80020-3853
Price: $175000
Date closed: 11/29/11
Seller: RESURRECTION PROPERTIES
Buyer, buyer’s address: JASON
KIRBY, 1 EVERGREEN ST, BROOMFIELD, CO 80020-2901
Address: 1 EVERGREEN ST, BROOMFIELD, 80020-2901
Price: $121000
Date closed: 12/2/11
Seller: SHAWN & JACQUELYN JEAN
HAMELE
Buyer, buyer’s address: BRIAN W
K KILCOYNE, 5091 MINNOW LN,
BROOMFIELD, CO 80023-3915
Address: 5091 MINNOW LN,
BROOMFIELD, 80023-3915
Price: $293000
Date closed: 11/21/11
Seller: MARK H & MARILYN LEE
JONES
Buyer, buyer’s address: KENNETH H
III CHRISTGEN, 200 BRECKENRIDGE
TRL, BROOMFIELD, CO 80020-9692
Address: 200 BRECKENRIDGE TRL,
BROOMFIELD, 80020-9692
Date closed: 11/30/11
Seller: JACQUELINE POOR & KENNETH W HAHN
Buyer, buyer’s address: KIRK & CASSANDRA HEDELIUS, 13421 ANTLERS
ST, BROOMFIELD, CO 80020-9020
Address: 13421 ANTLERS ST,
BROOMFIELD, 80020-9020
Price: $290000
Date closed: 11/29/11
Seller: GUY EUGENE & ANN BRADLEY MARTIN
Buyer, buyer’s address: GUY AND
ANN MARTIN LIVING TRUS, 13859
LEGEND TRL UNIT 104, BROOMFIELD, CO 80023-8274
Address: 13859 LEGEND TRL UNIT
104, BROOMFIELD, 80023-8274
Date closed: 12/1/11
Seller: PULTE HOME CORP
20A
|
Jan. 6-19, 2012 Boulder County Business Report | www.bcbr.com
Louisville offers incentives to Boulder firm
LOUISVILLE — Boulder Wind
Power Inc., a developer of wind turbine technology, has been offered
an incentive package worth up to
$531,000 from the city of Louisville
to relocate to the Colorado Technology Center.
The incentives, which would be
tax rebates offered over the next
five years, have been approved by
the Louisville City Council if Boulder Wind Power moves to a 34,000square-foot space at 1812 Boxelder St.
The company has yet to sign a lease,
according to the building’s owner, the
Etkin Johnson Group.
Boulder Wind
Po w e r n e e d s
room to grow,
said Chip Corboy,
Boulder Wind
Power’s director
of finance and
administration.
T he compa ny
has technology
REAL ESTATE
that
might make
Michael Davidson
wind turbines
less expensive,
more reliable and more efficient. It
has raised $46.5 million in venture
capital.
About 20 people currently work at
2845 Wilderness Place. That number
could grow to more than 40 in the
future, Corboy said.
“We were very pleased with the
outcome and the positive reception
we got from Louisville’s city council,”
Corboy said after the package was
approved.
Louisville’s city manager Malcolm
Fleming said the city offered to rebate
50 percent of the company’s use taxes
back to the company over a five-year
period, capping the total at $531,000.
Boulder Wind Power plans to purchase about $35.4 million in equipment and tools elsewhere, Fleming
said. The total amount of estimated
rebate is based on the purchase number and the city’s 3.5 percent use tax,
Fleming said.
“It will be fantastic. They’ll bring
new high-wage jobs and generate
revenue to support city services, and
expand the cluster of wind-energy
companies in Louisville and contribute to the economic vitality of the
city,” Fleming said. “What more could
you ask for?”
As of Jan. 3, Boulder Wind Power
had yet to sign a lease for the property,
said Barbara Myers, the leasing broker for the Etkin Johnson Group.
Etkin Johnson purchased the property for $1.85 million, or $53.89
per square foot, from Dion Brothers
Mercantile. The deal closed Nov. 21.
Paige Coker Heiman, president and
managing broker of Acquire Inc.,
represented the seller.
The building, which was built in
1995, is 100 percent vacant. Etkin
Johnson plans to invest more than
$250,000 to improve the property, according to the press release
announcing the acquisition.
CLEANING THE PLATE
Two-story makes way for restaurant and brewhouse
Michael Davidson
Boulder
County
Single-Builde
Top
10 Boulder
CountyBeach,
Builders
BJ’s Restaurants
Inc., a Huntington
California-based chain of restaurants,Top-Selling
plans to build a new
BJ’s Restaurant
and Brewhouse in Boulder
at 1690 29th
St. The current
was demolished
Year-To-Date
through
September
2011building on the site, a vacant 16,124-square-foot
Year-to-datetwo-story
throughbuilding,
September
2011
in the last week of December. When completed, the new 7,803-square-foot restaurant will have 272 interior seats and 44 patio seats,
Subdivision
Builder
City
Builder
Home Sales
County Market
according to plans filed with the city.
Share
1. Meritage
39
16.3%
1. Coal Creek Village 3
Meritage
Lafayette
firm is calling “a strategic merger.”
If Boulder Wind Power does move
which is located at 2580 Iris Ave.,
24
2. Canyon Creek 6The new company,
Richmond Re/Max
Homes
Erie
on
to Louisville, it will have good neighBoulder, and10.0%
other community
Top-Selling
Boulder
County
Single-Build
Top
10
Boulder
County
Builders
3.
Richmond
Homes
23
9.6%
Walnut,
will be aBoulder
boutique
bors in the wind turbine industry.
groups are working to form the
cen3. Renaissance
3 Town Homes
Creekresidential
BuildersLongmont
realthrough
estate firm
with access
to Re/
Danish
wind-energy
company
Vestas
ter, Acorn School
executive director
4.
Boulder
Creek Builders
21 2011
8.8%
Year-To-Date
through
September
Year-to-date
September
2011
4. Peloton Condos
Cityview Peloton
Boulder
Max’s extensive tools and resources,
opened
a research
office in Louisville
Matt Eldred said.
The center will
5.
Northfield
Commons/Coast/Markel
19
7.9%
Subdivision
Builder
City
County Market
5. Landmark
Chanin Development
Boulder
said Tom Kahn, owner
and managing
lastBuilder
year. Small-wind turbine Home
com- Salesserve infants
and children six
and Lofts
6. Cityview Peloton
12
5.0%
Sharewill be open
broker
of Walnut
Realty
Inc. Kahn
pany American Zephyr Corp. also has
under. The center
toEnd Single
5. North
Family
Markel
Homes
Louisville
7.
Chanin
Development
9
3.8%
will
be3 the head ofMeritage
the new firm. Lafayette
a presence
will focus on at-risk
1. Meritagein Louisville.
39 all children, but
16.3%
1.
Coal
Creek
Village
5. Silver Creek 1
Meritage
Lafayette
Walnut Realty was founded in
families.
8. BMB Builders
8
3.3%
2. Markel Homes
24
10.0%
2.
Canyon
Creek
6
Richmond
Homes
Erie
8. Coal Creek Village
Builders
Lafayette
1974 1,2
and was anBMB
independent
firm
BOULDER
The center will
9. Wonderland Homes
8
3.3% offer education,
3.
Richmond
Homes
23
9.6%
Renaissance
3 Town
Homes
Boulder Creek
BuildersLongmont
with
about
30 brokers,
Kahn
said.Boulder
It
ACORN TAKES ROOT: A plan
health care and community support
9.3.Northfield
Village
Northfield
Village
10. Lennar
7
2.9%
Boulder
8.8%
will
retain
its
offices
at
1911
11th
St.,
to 4.build
anCreek
earlyBuilders
childhood learning21 services in one building,
Eldred4.said.
Peloton Condos
Cityview
Peloton
Boulder
Fourplex
Condos
/Coast
to Coast/Markel
Remaining
homebuilders
69
28.9% cost is estimated
Ste 107, Boulder.
center
took
a step forward in late
The total project
5. Northfield
Commons/Coast/Markel
19
7.9%
Landmark
LoftsOther
Chaninestate
Development
Boulder
9.5.Hover
2
Lennar
Longmont
Total
239
100% and the center
is Crossing
large real
brokerDecember,
when an LLC formed
6. Cityview Peloton
12 around $3.2 million,
5.0%
expected
to be open by August.
age firms
by founders of the Acorn School for
5. North End Single
Familyapproached
MarkelWalnut
Homes Realty
Louisville
Source: Home Builders Research
Source: Home Builders Research
7. Chanin Development
3.8%
➤
See
Real
Estate,
28A
The school has
received more5.than
Early
Childhood Development closed9
Silver Creek 1
Meritage
Lafayette
BMB
Builders of an 18,031-square-8
3.3%
$1.8 million from
the City of Boulder
on8.the
purchase
8. CoalItCreek Village 1,2
BMB Builders
Lafayette
and Boulder County,
foot
buildingHomes
at 2845 Wilderness8
9. Wonderland
3.3% Eldred said.
Foreclosures
continues
to solicit
funds
Place.
Northfield Village
Northfield Village
Boulder
Highest-Priced
Home Sales
in Boulder
County
10. Lennar
7
2.9%grants and 9.
from local and national foundations,
Wilderness Early Childhood Cenin Boulder Valley
Fourplex Condos
/Coast to Coast/Markel
Remaining homebuilders
2011 the building from69 businesses and 28.9%
individual donors.
terNovember
LLC purchased
December
2011
9. Hover Crossing 2
Lennar
Longmont
Total
239
100%
Sale
Price
Address
Bart
MacGillivray
forBuyer,
$2.03
million,
WALNUT
JOINS
X:
according
County
propSource: Home
Builders
Research RE/MA
$3,200,000to BoulderAlastair
J. Brogan,
5288 Westridge
Drive,
Boulder
Source:
Home Builders Research
City
Foreclosures
Deeds
Walnut
Realty
Inc.
has
joined
forces
erty
records.
$3,000,000
David T. and Pamela J. Pure, 6359 Snowberry Lane, Niwot
Filed
Issued
with Re/Max Alliance in a move the
The founders of the Acorn School,
2. Markel Homes
$1,485,000
Diane M. and Julian H. Astley, 3613 Sunshine Canyon Drive, Boulder
$1,428,700
P. K.Home
and Julie Bala,
6454 Legend
Ridge Trail, Niwot
Highest-Priced
Sales
in Boulder
County
$1,250,000
November 2011 Rodolfo N. and Margaret B. Perez, 2579 Sumac Ave., Boulder
$1,100,000
Sale Price
$1,096,300
$3,200,000
Jonathan
R. Balck, 875 11th St., Boulder
Buyer, Address
Dan
P. Venturella,
Longmont
Alastair
J. Brogan,8941
5288Woodland
WestridgeRoad,
Drive,
Boulder
$1,050,000
$3,000,000
$1,050,000
$1,485,000
Karen
11205
Isabelle
Road,
Erie Lane, Niwot
DavidE.
T. Thiesen,
and Pamela
J. Pure,
6359
Snowberry
James
andand
Kristan
Maynard,
3091Sunshine
7th St., Boulder
Diane M.
JulianB.H.
Astley, 3613
Canyon Drive, Boulder
$1,020,000
$1,428,700
William
Bender,
5440
Arapahoe
P. K. andC.Julie
Bala,
6454
Legend Ave.,
RidgeBoulder
Trail, Niwot
$1,250,000
Rodolfo N. and Margaret B. Perez, 2579 Sumac Ave., Boulder
$1,100,000
Jonathan R. Balck,Source:
875 11th
St., Boulder
SKLD Information Services LLC - 303-695-3850
$1,096,300
Dan P. Venturella, 8941 Woodland Road, Longmont
$1,050,000
Karen E. Thiesen, 11205 Isabelle Road, Erie
$1,050,000
James and Kristan B. Maynard, 3091 7th St., Boulder
$1,020,000
William C. Bender, 5440 Arapahoe Ave., Boulder
Source: SKLD Information Services LLC - 303-695-3850
Allenspark
0
1
Broomfield
11
15
Foreclosures
Boulder 10
2
in Boulder Valley
Eldorado Springs 0
0
December 20111
Erie
0
Golden*
1
0
City
Foreclosures
Deeds
Jamestown 0
0
Filed
Issued
Lafayette 2
5
Allenspark
0
1
Longmont
29
8
Broomfield
11
15
Louisville
1
1
Boulder 10
2
Lyons
1
2
Eldorado Springs 0
0
Nederland
3
2
Erie
1
0
Niwot
0
0
Golden*
1
0
Pinecliffe
0
0
Jamestown 0
0
Superior
4
0
Lafayette 2
5
Ward
1
0
Longmont
29
8
TOTAL
64
36
Louisville
1
1
Year-to-date 2011 1,107
587
Lyons
1
2
*Reflects only the portion of Golden in Boulder County
Nederland
3
2
Source: Public trustees of Boulder and Broomfield counties
Niwot
0
0
Pinecliffe
0
0
Superior
4
0
Jan. 6-19, 2012
Boulder County Business Report | www.bcbr.com
real estate
BROOMFIELD
INDUSTRIAL LEASE: 116 Avenue LLC leased 900 square feet of
industrial space at 7247 W. 116th
Ave. to Richard Heidebrecht. Chris
Ball and Brandon Ray of Cassidy
Turley Fuller Real Estate represented
the landlord.
LONGMONT
MALL AUCTION DELAYED:
The bankruptcy auction for the Twin
Peaks Mall has been postponed until
at least Jan. 11, according to the Boul-
der County Public Trustee.
The 555,602-square-foot mall is
owned by Panattoni Development
Co., which bought the mall for an
undisclosed amount in August 2007.
The mall opened in 1985.
The mall went into foreclosure in
September, after its owner fell behind
on a $26.5 million loan from Bank of
America, according to public trustee’s
office records.
The auction was delayed because
Bank of America did not submit the
bid figure necessary for the auction
to proceed, a trustee’s office staffer
said.
NewMark Merrill Cos., the company hired by Panattoni in July 2010
to manage the mall, has put in a contract to purchase the property. Representatives of the company, which is
based in Woodland Hills, California,
and has a regional office in Fort Collins, cannot discuss its plans, citing a
confidentiality agreement.
LOVELAND
ACE DEAL CLOSES: The city of
Loveland has closed on its deal to sell
the former Agilent property to Bowling Green, Ky.-based developer Cumberland & Western for $5 million.
Cumberland & Western closed on
the property Dec. 20, paying cash
to the city. The property will be
renamed the Rocky Mountain Center
for Innovation and Technology.
The city purchased the 300-acre
property from Agilent for $5.5 million
over the summer with intent to sell 170
acres of the campus with five buildings
for redevelopment. The city of Loveland
retains 130 undeveloped acres adjacent
to the Big Thompson River and city
recreation trail as open space, and also
retains 144 shares of water rights.
Existing buildings on the campus
total 810,000 square feet. Under C
& W, the property will once again
become home to technology-oriented
businesses.
“For years to come, this property
will bring jobs, productivity and economic benefit to Loveland,” said Cecil
Gutierrez, Loveland’s mayor. “We
welcome C & W’s revitalization of the
property into a thriving technological
center once again.”
WESTMINSTER
CIRCLE POINT LEASE: Consumers, Contractors and Carriers
Network LLC has signed a lease for
9,017 square feet at the Circle Point
II office building at 11080 Circle
Point Road. Hunter Barto of Dean
Callan & Co. represented the tenant. John Miller of CB Richard Ellis
represented the landlord, Circle Point
Properties LLC.
Beth Potter contributed to this article.
Michael Davidson can be reached at
303-630-1943 or via email at [email protected].
from 6A
$2.16 per share.
Arca Biopharma is raising working
capital buy selling common stock and
warrants to six institutional investors
in a private placement. In December,
it said it would issue approximately
1.67 million shares of common stock
to investors together with warrants
to purchase approximately 1.25 million shares of common stock. Arca
expects to receive approximately
$1.5 million in net proceeds from the
transaction.
Array improved in generating revenue and reducing its losses by the
third quarter of 2011. It continues to
pour money into research and development. During fiscal 2012, Array
expects to report results of six clinical trials having to do with drugs that
would treat various forms of cancer,
and pain associated with osteoarthritis. The company also has an antiasthma drug in development.
Broomfield-based Vail Resorts
Inc. has the most expensive price per
share closing out the year at $42.36,
but it was down from $51.89 in January and a high of $53.38 in the same
month. The operator of ski resorts
in Colorado and California took a
hit during the year due to a flat real
estate segment, but its season ski
pass sales were up about 13 percent
Anthem
21A
from 20A
management about a merger before
the deal with Re/Max Alliance came
together, according to Kahn.
“We decided it was the best marriage,” Kahn said.
Re/Max on Walnut will have a new
emphasis on the luxury home market,
and it will be branded as part of the
Re/Max Collection, which is Re/
Max’s unit for the upscale market.
stocks
|
entering December. The company
continues to anticipate 8 percent to
12 percent growth for resort earnings
for fiscal 2012.
Dynamic Materials Corp., a Boulder-based company that is one of the
world’s largest specialists in explosion-welded clad metal plating, had
a rebound year, logging improved
earnings, both revenue and income,
in each of the first three quarters of
2011 compared with 2010. But its
stock took a slight dip, dropping from
$22.71 per share in January to $19.74
in December. The company said its
success is dependent upon a number
of industries, including oil and gas,
alternative energy, chemicals and
petrochemicals, hydrometallurgy,
aluminum production, shipbuilding, power generation and industrial
refrigeration.
Healthy lifestyle company Gaiam
Inc. in Louisville had an up-anddown year, losing money in some
quarters, turning a profit in others.
Gaiam launched Gaiam TV in the
third quarter and expanded its digital
distribution agreements with other
companies, including iTunes. The
company said it would return to a
more favorable direct relationship
with Wal-Mart’s entertainment media
department after ending a third party
fulfillment arrangement in July.
Niwot-based shoemaker Crocs
Inc.’s stock road a rollercoaster
throughout the year, starting at
$17.54 in January and closing at
$14.57 in December, a 12 percent
decline. In August, its stock hit a high
of $32.47 per share, but it couldn’t
sustain the pace. This despite the
company during the first three quarters of the year increasing revenue
$59.3 million, or 27.5 percent, compared with the same period in 2011,
and increasing profit by $28.4 million, or 23.9 percent.
Longmont-based DigitalGlobe
Inc.’s stock took the biggest tumble
dollarwise among area public companies. The provider of high-quality
pictures of earth taken from orbiting satellites saw its stock fall from
$31.18 in January to $17.11 at the end
of December, a decline of $14.07, or
45 percent. This came despite positive revenue reports and the signing
of hefty government contracts as
recently as the third quarter.
The biggest percent loser was New
Frontier Media Inc., a Boulder-based
distributor and producer of general
and adult entertainment. Its stock
dropped 78 percent, from $4.75
to $1.03 per share. Revenue in the
company’s video-on-demand and
pay-per-view segments declined,
and revenue in the film production
segment dropped as well during the
third quarter.
companies had agreed to keep the
price private.
The land has been approved for
approximately 1,500 homes, the press
release said.
The two developments are part of
a 1,700-arce master-planned community between the Northwest Parkway
and Colorado Highway 7 in north
Broomfield.
The project is about half-complete,
according to Broomfield Building
Department records. Through Octo-
ber, 1,308 certificates of occupancy
were issued.
“We want to continue making
Anthem the best place to live in the
Front Range. And we look forward
to working with builders eager to be
part of this very popular community,”
Wheelock principal Dan Green said
in the press release.
Wheelock’s Denver partner, Jeff
Handlin of Oread Capital and Development, will manage Anthem’s future
development.
Wheelock is involved to projects
similar to Anthem in Texas, Florida
and North Carolina.
PulteGroup will maintain local
customer service teams at Anthem
and continue to provide warranty
service to its current homeowners,
according to the release.
PulteGroup (NYSE: PHM), which
is based in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, will not realize a material loss
or gain on the land sale, according to
the release.
The biggest percent loser
was New Frontier Media Inc., a Boulder-based distributor
and producer of general and adult entertainment. Its stock
dropped 78 percent, from $4.75 to $1.03 per share. Revenue in
the company’s video-on-demand and pay-per-view segments
declined, and revenue in the film production segment dropped
as well during the third quarter.
from 1A
Dec. 28 indicate the deal is worth
more than $27.25 million.
Pulte Home Corp. sold property
to WS ACB Development LLC for
$20 million and sold property to
WS ACB Investments LLC for $7.2
million. Both LLCs were created by
Wheelock Street Capital, according
to the Secretary of State’s office.
The property sale price was not
disclosed in the press release announcing the sale and a spokeswoman for
Wheelock Street Capital said the
22A
|
Jan. 6-19, 2012 Boulder County Business Report | www.bcbr.com
opinion
editorial
Boulder’s quest
to tax software,
real estate sends
wrong message
T
wo tax measures being
pursued by the city of
Boulder send the wrong
message about the city’s
commitment to economic vitality.
The first such measure is an illadvised attempt to “clarify” that
the city’s tax code encompasses
software downloaded from the
Internet.
The measure stems from a court
ruling involving Ball Aerospace &
Technologies Corp. A Boulder district judge ruled in August that the
city’s current software tax applies
only to software delivered via a
physical medium, such as tapes or
disks.
City officials worry that not being
able to tax software downloaded via
the Internet would eliminate about
$3 million per year in tax revenue.
So they’re asking for a clarification
that the tax code applies to all software, no matter the medium of its
delivery.
In our view, such a “clarification”
would violate the state constitution.
The TABOR amendment clearly
requires that new taxes be presented to the public for approval.
A court has already ruled that
the city’s tax does not apply to software that has been downloaded. For
the city to now “clarify” — retroactively — that the code does apply to
such downloads is disingenuous and
legally risky.
It would be, in effect, a new tax,
requiring a public vote.
For the record, a new state law
repeals a state-level tax on software
purchases, a repeal that takes effect
July 1. The state had the right idea
in repealing the tax, and Boulder
should take heed.
Likewise, city support for a real
estate transfer tax is also a bad idea.
City officials have made it a priority to lobby the state Legislature to
allow communities to impose real
estate transfer taxes, which currently are prohibited.
We believe that such a measure
will not win legislative approval,
making Boulder’s push for the tax
somewhat Quixotic. Battling this
particular windmill means that
city officials will be distracted from
more-important pursuits.
Both of these tax measures portray a city that will do whatever it
can to seek out new sources of revenue, even if the pursuits are unconstitutional, unwise and potentially
damaging to the economy.
Wrong message indeed.
Make 2012 a year of action
Redevelopments,
tax policies should
top local agendas
A
s 2011 fades into memory, let’s hope that Boulder Valley business, civic
and governmental leaders
make 2012 a year of progress on some
important issues facing our region.
From economic vitality to redevelopment of distressed properties, from
issues around taxation to how electricity is provided, the Boulder Valley
needs to see the ball moved forward.
In particular:
• Revitalization — i.e., redevelopment — of the Twin Peaks Mall should
be at the top of Longmont’s agenda.
What was once a vibrant retail destination has deteriorated into a project
crying out for new thinking. Twin
Peaks’ decline has mirrored similar
problems at Foothills Mall in Fort
Collins and the Greeley Mall, as
well as the old Crossroads Mall in
Boulder. But Crossroads’ rebirth as
Twenty Ninth Street offers at least
one path forward for Twin Peaks
— not necessarily as a lifestyle center,
but as another example that properties can be reborn.
• Similarly, the Diagonal Plaza in
Boulder is in desperate need of redevelopment. Multiple property owners of the 33-acre project make any
revival a difficult task — all the more
reason that the city should convene
property owners now to determine
a course of action. City planning and
urban-renewal officials have been
studying the area for the past couple
of years, but let’s
ma ke 2012 a
year where those
studies transform
into action.
• On another
front, Boulder
is making admirable progress,
namely the HarPUBLISHER'S
ves t Ju nc t ion
NOTEBOOK
development at
Christopher Wood
30th and Pearl
streets. Both the
city and private developers are collaborating on this new, transit-oriented
development, which eventually will
include retail, hotel, office, transportation and residential uses. The project promises to take a blighted — and
we use that term not in its legal sense
— part of town and help it become a
vibrant economic engine.
• Boulder city officials should back
away from two controversial tax measures, including a proposed real estate
property-transfer tax and a software
tax on downloads. (See related editorial.) The transfer tax would require
legislative approval and would damage
a real estate market that has already
endured several difficult years. The
software tax is one that will likely be
challenged in court, as it likely viosales Director
Circulation manager
Editor
business development Director
Cartoonist
Doug [email protected]
Boulder County Business Report
3180 Sterling Circle, Suite 201,
Boulder, Colo. 80301-2338, is
published biweekly by BizWest
Media LLC a Colorado corporation,
in Boulder, Colo.
Christopher Wood can be reached at
303-440-4950 or via email at cwood@
bcbr.com.
Publisher
Christopher [email protected]
Volume 31, Issue 1
lates the TABOR amendment requiring public votes on new taxes.
• Closure of the Butterball turkey-processing plant in downtown
Longmont presents a challenge and
opportunity for the city. Replacing
350 jobs is a difficult task in any economic climate, but the closure also
represents a unique opportunity to
transform the 27-acre location into a
core element in downtown’s ongoing
rebirth — particularly as related to
the FasTracks transit project.
• Speaking of FasTracks, a new
cost estimate puts the tab for extending the northwest rail corridor from
Westminster to Longmont now
stands at $1.4 billion, up from the
previous estimate of $894.4 million.
Regional Transportation District
officials need to determine how the
higher costs will affect the project’s
anticipated 2020 completion date.
• ConocoPhillips needs to put
up or shut up on its planned renewable-energy research campus in
Louisville. The site, which formerly
housed Storage Technology Corp./
Sun Microsystems Inc., was once
anticipated to employ 7,000 workers
but has been in limbo with ConocoPhillips’ split into two separate
companies. But company officials
owe it to Louisville and the region to
make a decision — fast.
writers
Michael [email protected]
Beth [email protected]
Research Director
Beth Edwards............. [email protected]
Production Director
Dave Thompson.. [email protected]
Art Director
Brittany Rauch............. [email protected]
Kevin [email protected]
Jason [email protected]
Marketing manager
De Dahlgren............. [email protected]
Marketing Assistant
Melissa Matonis......... [email protected]
Janet Hatfield............. [email protected]
Ron Ruelle
Contributing Photographers
Michael Myers, Peter Wayne
Contributing WRITERS
Elizabeth Gold, Heather McWilliams
Kim [email protected] To advertise or subscribe: 303-440-4950
Senior Account Executive
Account Executives
Marlena [email protected]
Brad [email protected]
Fax: 303-440-8954 Online edition: www.BCBR.com
The entire contents of this newspaper are copyrighted by
BizWest Media with all rights reserved. Reproduction or
use, without permission, of editorial or graphic content in
any manner is prohibited.
Jan. 6-19, 2012
Boulder County Business Report | www.bcbr.com
calendar
23A
on the job
January
6
36 Community Solutions presents its Fifth
Annual Legislative Breakfast from 7:30 to 9
a.m., Friday, Mountain View Room, 1st Bank Center,
11450 Broomfield Lane, Broomfield. Attending legislators will describe their transportation and other
legislative priorities for the coming session.
9
Night with a Futurist - Spaceport Colorado will
be from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m., Monday, DaVinci Institute, 511 E. South Boulder Road, Louisville. Colorado
has announced plans for constructing a commercial
spaceport for launching future space flights. Cost is
$20. Contact Jan Wagner at 303-666-4133 or jan@
davinciinstitute.com.
10
Bridge House will launch Ready to Work, a
transitional employment program for homeless people, at 8:30 a.m. Tuesday, at Pearl and 13th
streets, Boulder. Hear from business and civic leaders
on the importance of Ready to Work as a pathway to
permanent jobs, housing and self-sufficiency.
14
16th Annual Lafayette Quaker Oatmeal
Festival will be from 7:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.,
Saturday, Bob L. Burger Recreation Center, 111 West
Baseline Road, Lafayette. Hot Oatmeal Breakfast is
7:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at Pioneer Elementary School.
Oatmeal breakfast is $8 for adults, senior 60-plus is
$6. Oatmeal Baking Contest: Drop off entries at 8
a.m., winners announced at noon. Health Fair: screenings and interactive programs 8 a.m. to 1 p.m., Bonfils
Community Blood Drive: 8 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Contact
Lafayette Chamber of Commerce at 303-666-9555 or
[email protected].
19
Broomfield Chamber of Commerce will present its Annual Dinner & Celebration from
5:30 to 9:30 p.m., Thursday, Renaissance Boulder
Flatiron Hotel, 500 Flatiron Blvd., Broomfield. Cost is
$85 per person, $800 for table of 10. Register online
at www.broomfieldchamber.com.
The Lafayette Chamber of Commerce will host its
January Business After Hours from 5 to 7 p.m.,
Thursday, at H & R Block, 535 W. S. Boulder Road,
Suite 250, Lafayette. Cost is $10 for members with
an advance R.S.V.P, $12 at the door. Go to www.
lafayettecolorado.com to register online. Or call
303-666-9555 if you are not a chamber member and
want to attend.
measuring
|
20
Vectra Bank presents its annual Boulder
Valley Economic Breakfast from 7:30 to
9:30 a.m., Friday, Hotel Boulderado, 2115 13th St.,
Boulder. Speakers are Phyllis Resnick, Center for
Colorado’s Economic Future, and George Feiger, chief
executive of Contango Capital Advisors. Register
online at www.vectrabank.com/proactive-bank/buildrelationships/econevent-boulder.jsp.
23
The DaVinci Institute presents Startup Junkie
Underground — How can you raise $1
Million the Internet? from 6:30 to 9 p.m. DaVinci
Institute, 511 E. South Boulder Road, Louisville. Focus
is on a new crowd-funding bill, HR 2930 passed in the
House, and S.1791, working its way through the Senate. Cost is $20 Contact Jan Wagner at 303-666-4133
or [email protected].
25
Longmont citizens can comment on the
design concepts for revitalization of the 1st
& Main Station, an area south of downtown Longmont, from 6 to 8 p.m., Wednesday, Longmont
Public Library, meeting rooms A and B, 409 Fourth
Ave., Longmont. For more information email Phil
Greenwald at [email protected] or call
303-651-8335.
26
Boulder Economic Council presents the 2012
Economic Forecast: Boulder & Beyond,
from 4 to 7:30 p.m., Thursday, at the UCAR Center Green Auditorium, 3090 Center Green Drive
Boulder. Panel discussion is Emerging from the
Recession: Economic Challenges and Opportunities,
with panelists Jane Brautigam, Boulder city manager;
Susan Graf, president and CEO, Boulder Chamber;
Ric Porreca, senior vice chancellor and chief financial
officer, University of Colorado Boulder; and Cindy
Schmidt, director, office of government affairs, UCAR
and CO-LABS board member. Also, economist
Richard Wobbekind of CU presents an outlook for
the national, state and local economy. Reception at
6:30 p.m. Cost is $55 or $45 for Boulder Chamber
members. $65 at the door.
27
The 11th Annual Imagine! Celebration to
benefit people with developmental disabilities
will be from 5:30 to 9:30 p.m., Friday, at the Plaza
Hotel Conference Center, Longmont, with more than
200 silent and live auction items. Tickets are $95 each
($65 tax deductible), online at https://secure.imaginecolorado.org/ssl/CelebrationRSVP.htm.
GOVERNMENT
Coffin
Hartlage
Murnane
Margaret Murnane, a distinguished professor
of physics and a fellow of JILA at the University
of Colorado Boulder, has been appointed as
chairwoman of the President’s Committee on
the National Medal of Science. The committee
selects winners of the medal.
HIGH TECH
EDUCATION
University of Colorado Boulder named Deborah
J. Coffin as CU-Boulder vice chancellor for student affairs effective Jan. 1. Coffin has served in
the post in an interim capacity since July 2011.
Prior to her service as interim vice chancellor for
student affairs, Coffin served as associate vice
chancellor for student affairs and dean of students from 2008-11, assistant vice chancellor for
student affairs and executive director of Housing
and Dining Services from 2006-08 and executive director of Housing and Dining Services
from 2001-2006. Coffin also served in various
housing leadership capacities at the University
of Northern Colorado (1982-95; 1998-2001) and
the University of Wyoming (1995-98).
University of Colorado Boulder named Robert
Boswell as CU-Boulder vice chancellor for diversity, equity and community engagement effective
Jan. 1. Boswell, a professor of molecular, cellular
and developmental biology with a long and distinguished career at CU-Boulder, has occupied the
post since July 2010 on an interim basis.
The Institute of Business & Medical Careers Inc.
promoted Stacy Stolen to business development manager. Stolen will execute a variety
of duties related to externship and job placement at branch campus in Longmont as well
as placement efforts in Northern Colorado as a
whole through additional support endeavors for
the campuses in Fort Collins and Greeley. Her
services will extend to students in the School
of Business, School of Allied Health Careers,
School of Paralegal Studies and the School
of Massage & Healing Arts. Stolen has been
employed with IBMC as associate director of
career services in Longmont since March 2011.
Boulder-based Lingoport, a provider of software
internationalization products and consulting
services, hired Spencer Thomas as a member
of the firm’s marketing and sales team. Thomas
has been instrumental in relaunching Lingoport’s
internationalization blog, which serves as a
resource for software internationalization and
localization related information.
LAW
John Wade Gaddis Jr. is a new partner of Kendall, Koenig & Oelsner PC, which has offices in
Denver and Boulder. His practice focuses on
mergers and acquisitions, private equity and debt
and equity financing. He also has extensive experience handling company formations and general
corporate and securities matters. Prior to joining
KKO in 2007, Gaddis was an associate in the Denver and Boulder offices of Faegre & Benson.
NONPROFIT
Humane Society of Boulder Valley hired Allison
Hartlage as a training and behavior coordinator. Hartlage attended the San Francisco SPCA
Academy for Dog Trainers, where she received
her certification as a canine trainer and behavior
counselor, graduating with honors. She is a member of APDT, a canine good citizen evaluator and
holds her CPDT-KA, which stands for certified
professional dog trainer - knowledge assessed.
Deadline to submit items for On the Job is three
weeks prior to publication of each biweekly issue.
Mail to Editor, Boulder County Business Report,
3180 Sterling Circle, Suite 201, Boulder, CO
80301; fax to 303-440-8954; or e-mail to news@
bcbr.com with On the Job in the subject line.
Photos submitted will not be returned.
from 3A
invest in our future – our R&D budget,” Murphy added.
“We also make sure to pay attention to our own staff and keep our
own turnover down.”
The Booth Company provides 360degree feedback surveys to help organizations measure the skill levels of leadership talent. The assessment model
uses feedback from peers, subordinates
and supervisors to help determine an
employee’s strengths and weaknesses
in relation to defined skills.
Specific training and coaching can
then be applied to increase skills in
weak areas.
T he 360 -degree model goes
beyond traditional performance
appraisals that generally have
employees reviewed only by their
managers by bringing in feedback
from more sources.
“We improve managers so they
can improve the parts and whole of a
company,” Murphy explained.
Booth founded the company on
delivering communication skill workshops. By 1976, he began designing
survey feedback programs based on
the 360-feedback model.
“We had been discussing a succession plan with Daniel for several
years,” Murphy said. “When he hit
his 70th birthday, he decided it was
time to fish instead of coach.” Booth
continues to consult, coach and train
for the company.
Murphy has worked for The
Booth Company since 1996, and
Kuhne since 1995. They started out
as entry-level data analysts who processed data into feedback reports.
Now, Murphy serves as chief
executive, focusing on planning and
implementing the company’s strategic direction as well as new product
development and day-to-day business
operations. Kuhne, managing partner
and chief technology officer, drives
the technology vision and manages
the company’s information systems.
“In recent years we’ve moved
into more hosting of other peoples’
surveys as well as using our own,
whereas the business was originally
built around leadership- and management-development assessments.”
Murphy said.
Clients include corporations that
may or may not have survey content
but not the software and leadership
development consultants.
The Booth Company’s assessment
process starts with helping clients
develop10 to 15 competency areas
that are role specific, according to
Murphy. Competencies include skills
like goal setting, management, communication, delegation and setting a
vision for the organization.
“Most companies have performance appraisals based on metrics
that show how people have done for
the year – it’s top-down,” Murphy
said. “This is upward feedback that’s
confidential and all about development so managers can do better in
companies and in their careers.”
“Not often are you
able to meet your future
business partner in
a college dorm.
Derek Murphy
chief executive,
The Booth Company
After survey results are tallied, clients have the option of tapping into
The Booth Company’s network of
coaches or having the company come
onsite to train internal coaches.
“The goal is to make results actionable so an individual improves as a
manager,” Murphy said. “They work
with a coach or a mentor to create an
action plan to develop skills.”
He describes typical clients as
Fortune 1000 companies with 1,000
to 5,000 employees as well as some
smaller companies and nonprofits.
“We work with several hundred
clients at any given time and several
thousand over the years,” he added.
Cost for the company’s services
range from less than $100 to more
than $300 per manager. “It depends
on what assessments are chosen, the
volume of assessments and whether
they use their content or ours.
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