

Page 12AA —
COLORADO REAL ESTATE JOURNAL
— March 18-March 31, 2015
Mark Jeffries
joined the Den-
ver regional office of
NorthMarq
Capital,
a commercial real estate
financial intermediary, as vice
president and producer.
Most recently, Jeffries was vice
president of capital markets with
Johnson Capital Inc., which was
acquired by
Walker &
Dunlop in
late 2014. He
formerly was
a director at
Trinity One
Group, a
Denver-based
boutique com-
mercial mort-
gage banking
firm and vice president of Essex
Financial Group. In addition, he
has held positions in real estate
finance and investment with
Aspen 11 Financial LLC.
He has more than 10 years of
commercial banking experience
in the Denver area and has been
involved with the placement of
more than $500 million in real
estate capital in his career.
Jeffries graduated from the
University of Northern Colo-
rado with a degree in business
management.
s
Chris Zlocki
of
Colliers Inter-
national
recently was recognized
at the real estate firm’s annual
awards luncheon, which recog-
nized the company’s top achiev-
ers across the United States.
The company’s annual awards
are bestowed upon individuals
and teams for superior leadership
and achievement in production,
customer service, community
involvement and innovation.
The 2014 InnovationAward
was presented to Zlocki, head of
strategy and innovation in the
company’s corporate solutions
group for his work in developing
data-driven workplace solutions
that help clients to advance their
business objectives.
The company’s annual Innova-
tionAward recognizes innovative
developments and new client
solutions that help shape the
industry and set Colliers Inter-
national apart from competitors.
Based in Denver, Zlocki leads
three practice areas including
lease administration, technology
services (including Colliers 360)
and consulting services that are
focused on portfolio strategy,
footprint optimization, opera-
tions consulting, capital expendi-
ture management and financial
forecasting.
s
Robert (Bob) C. Bramble
joined full-service commercial real
estate firm
Dunton Commercial
Real Estate.
A30-year veteran of commer-
cial real estate, Bramble special-
izes in selling and leasing retail
real estate throughout the Denver
metro area from national and
local retailers in large and small-
scale transactions.
Prior to joining Dunton Com-
mercial, he was a managing direc-
tor at Newmark Grubb Knight
Frank.
s
Amber Wyatt
was promoted
to paralegal at
Coan, Payton &
Payne LLC,
a Northern Colorado
law firm.
As paralegal, Wyatt will work
alongside and assist Michael C.
Payne, founding partner, and
Walter A. Winslow, senior asso-
ciate, in the firm’s Fort Collins
office. Her practice will focus on
real estate, business and creditors’
rights.
Wyatt attended Colorado State
University. She has prior experi-
ence working as a legal assistant
in the Fort Collins area. Wyatt
started as a legal assistant with
Coan Payton & Payne’s Fort Col-
lins office inMay 2014 assisting
attorneys and paralegals with
serving client needs.
s
Barker Rinker Seacat Archite
The
Colorado Bankers Asso-
ciation
recognized three bankers
for their commitment to the com-
munity at the CBA’s annual legis-
lative luncheon.
The association, which repre-
sents more than 90 percent of the
148 banks in Colorado, presents
the Banker of Distinction award
to representatives of the industry
who embody the importance of
the community banking spirit by
being involved in and dedicated
to activities vital to the health of
local institutions and people.
The 2015 Bankers of Distinction
are
Don Tomoi,
Bank of Colora-
do;
Danielle Vaughan,
FirstBank;
and
Lonnie Parsons,
ANB Bank.
Tomoi joined the Bank of Colo-
rado in 1983. He currently serves
as the market president at the Fort
Lupton Branch, a position he has
held since 1989. Tomoi is a gradu-
ate of the University of Wyoming
with a degree in finance.
As regional president based in
Colorado Springs, Lonnie Parsons
leads the growth and success of
ANB Bank’s Southern Colorado
branches. He heads development
efforts in business and personal
banking and collaborates with
all bank departments to ensure
smooth service delivery across
product lines.
Aveteran banker with experi-
ence beginning in 1979, he previ-
ously served seven years as mar-
ket president of a bank in Pueblo.
Prior to relocating to Colorado,
Lonnie was senior vice president/
regional credit
officer for a
bank in Salt
Lake City.
In his early
career, he built
his experience
inMinnesota,
working for
several com-
munity banks
and one inter-
state bank as vice president with a
focus in commercial banking.
He holds a bachelor’s degree
in business management from
the University of North Dakota
and pursued a Master of Business
Adminstration at North Dakota
State University.
Vaughan is the CRAand fair
lending officer for FirstBank, and
she has worked for the bank since
1999. In her current role, she man-
ages the bank’s community rein-
vestment, fair lending and home
mortgage disclosure programs.
Some func-
tions which
support these
programs
include regu-
latory impact;
consumer,
residential and
commercial
lending; as
well as com-
munity devel-
opment lending, services, and
investments. In prior FirstBank
roles, Vaughan’s responsibilities
included branch management,
loan origination, and the man-
agement and development of
FirstBank’s commercial online
banking service, Internet Cash
Management.
She received her bachelor’s
degree in business management
in 2003 from the University of
Denver and her MBAfrom the
University of Phoenix in 2006. She
also received her Graduate Bank-
ing degree from the Graduate
School of Banking in Boulder.
s
Who’s News High Fives!Turner Construction’s Den-
ver business unit raised $1,000
that enabled four first-grade
classes at Coronado Hills Ele-
mentary in north Denver to
go on an end-of-the-year field
trip. The money was raised
through individual employee
donations at Turner’s holiday
party.
Turner employees visited
the school Feb. 5 to present the
donation to the classes and led
a marshmallow-build project.
The employees broke into four
teams and talked with the stu-
dents about Turner Construc-
tion, showed them pictures
of buildings Turner has built,
demonstrated personal pro-
tective equipment, and spent
an hour helping them create
their marshmallow buildings.
School
hiring
needs,
decreased grant money and
more students meant that,
without Turner’s donation,
students would not have had
the opportunity to participate
in a field trip all year. Coro-
nado Hills serves a high-needs
population, with many stu-
dents receiving free/reduced
lunches. A significant number
of the 560 students are English
language learners.
Turner employees who par-
ticipated in the school visit
heard student comments such
as, “I hope I can be in con-
struction when I grow up. It’s
SO cool!” “You can guys can
come back and be our sub-
stitute teachers whenever our
teachers are out” and “Turner
rules!”
s
Turner Construction raises $1,000 to
fund Coronado first-grade field trip
Turner Construction’s Adam Horecki helps Coronado Hills students
construct a marshmallow building.
High Fives! recognizes good deeds and accomplishments
by companies and individuals in the Colorado commercial
real estate industry. Please share your good news
and photos with us by emailin
g jjamieson@crej.com.Submissions should be 200 words or less.
Mark Jeffries
Danielle Vaughan
Lonnie Parsons
ronmentally,” said Moseley, who
represented the seller,
Korenic
Properties LLC. Indvest LLC,
rep-
resented by
Ilya Klein
of
Unique
Properties LLC-TCN Worldwide,
was the buyer.
A. Alliance Moving and Storage
occupies the property.
n
Natural Food Works,
an
operational partner for organic
and natural food brands, sub-
leased 21,655 sf of industrial space
at 4220 Carson St. in Denver for its
third facility, which also will serve
as its headquarters.
“This will allow us to bring in
new production processes, includ-
ing adding high-pressure process-
ing capabilities to further support
the growingnatural, healthbrands
in the Rocky Mountain area. In
addition, the new space has two
floors and plenty of refrigeration,
as well as room for expansion,”
said
Robb Casoria,
Natural Food
WorksCEO. “We recentlyhad two
of our eight clientsmove their base
of operations from the East Coast
this past year, more evidence that
the Boulder-Denver area is the epi-
center of the natural/organic food
industry.”
Natural Food Works subleased
the space from Udi’s Bakery,
which continues to occupy a por-
tion of the building. The property
is located within Mountain West
Business Park at Interstate 70 and
Peoria Street.
Neil Littmann
and
Scott
Reichenberg
of
The Colorado
Group Inc.
represented Natural
Food Works.
Drew McManus
of
Cushman & Wakefield of Colo-
rado
represented Udi’s.
s
Enterprise Continued from Page 3AA