Denver City Council Adopts Downtown Area Plan

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Denver City Council on Monday, Nov. 17, approved the 2025 Downtown Area Plan, a major step in shaping the future of the city’s urban core. The plan, developed jointly by the Downtown Denver Partnership and Denver’s Department of Community Planning and Development, reflects a year-long process that gathered input from thousands of residents. It outlines a long-term vision to reinforce downtown as a primary neighborhood—anchoring economic activity, cultural programming, and community life for years ahead.

“Today marks an incredibly important milestone not only for downtown, but for the future of our city. This plan addresses our current needs while charting a bold vision for the next decade, creating a downtown where communities thrive and businesses flourish,” said  Kourtny Garrett, president and CEO of the Downtown Denver Partnership. “As we move to implementation, we’re energized by the unified commitment for downtown that will bring this vision to life.”  

“This plan reflects thousands of voices, from neighbors at pop-up events to families at community celebrations, all calling for a downtown that’s easier to reach, more affordable to live in, and more joyful to spend time in,” said  Denver Mayor Mike Johnston. “By opening the door to more opportunities in our city center, we’re committing to a downtown that is playful, livable, and resilient.”  

As downtown Denver is a significant economic driver for Denver, the Front Range and the Mountain West, the Plan identifies four core opportunities that address current market headwinds while planning for the next 20 years of growth and development. The first opportunity focuses on breaking down barriers to make downtown easier to reach and navigate by enhancing our transit and pedestrian infrastructure and making downtown accessible and welcoming to the surrounding neighborhoods. Another opportunity focuses on catalyzing investment, especially public investment, in key areas to spark private development, particularly leveraging the Denver Downtown Development Authority to support the transformation and adaptive reuse of aging office buildings into vibrant mixed-use spaces. 

A core theme is choosing to play that creates a connected network of parks, plazas, and public spaces, from the transformational Skyline Park renovation to the signature 5280 Trail, through programming and activation that bring these spaces to life through events, art, and community gatherings. The final opportunity addresses the housing imperative by aiming to double downtown’s residential population while ensuring housing diversity and affordability, preserving existing affordable units and creating new ones, supporting a range of housing types, including family-friendly options, and identifying partners to provide stable, affordable homeownership opportunities. 

“Downtown is everybody’s neighborhood, and this plan makes that real. The Downtown Area Plan gives us a clear path to create more homes, safer streets, and a city center that works for every Denverite,” said  District 10 Councilman Chris Hinds.   

The Downtown Area  Plan  community process was led by Sasaki with project partners, Radian, OV Consulting, SB Friedman, Root Policy Research, Affiliated Engineers, Inc.,  ArLand Land Use Economics, and Historic Denver.  

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