CREJ - page 39

April 6-April 19, 2016 —
COLORADO REAL ESTATE JOURNAL
— Page 39
serves numerous municipal and
public-private clients throughout
the mountain corridor. His focus
on civil site design, project man-
agement and client relations bring
value to his broad project base
consisting of PK-12 and higher
education facilities, institutional,
commercial and residential sites.
Ian Glaser
has been with the
firm’s structural team since 2004
and has been promoted to associ-
ate. Glaser is
the company’s
director of
historic pres-
ervation and
he manages
JVA’s Historic
Preservation
Studio out
of the Boul-
der office.
His career is
focused on
projects in adaptive reuse, investi-
gations, seismic assessments and
seismic retrofits.
Brian Campbell
was promoted
to associate. Campbell has been
with the civil team since 2013
andmanages the Fort Collins
office. He has
workedwith
bothmunici-
pal clients for
infrastructure
projects and
architects/
developers
for civil site
design proj-
ects. Camp-
bell’s past
work history
with the city of Fort Collins and
the city of Boulder has allowed
him to gain experience in assisting
clients through the entitlement
process and understanding the
needs of municipalities.
Andrew Sparn
was promoted
to associate. Sparn has been with
the firm’s environmental team
since 2011. He has provided
leadership as JVA’s environmen-
tal teamhas grown to 20 staff
members andwas instrumental
in establish-
ing the firm’s
Denver office.
Sparn has
experience
in water and
wastewater
treatment and
infrastructure
design, per-
mitting and
successful
construction
administration. He has expertise
with state and federal funding
agencies and continues to deliver
projects for disadvantaged com-
munities across Colorado.
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Southern Colorado Com-
mercial Brokers
recently held its
inaugural Deal MakerAwards to
honor and celebrate the 2015 com-
mercial property sale and lease
deals of the year for Southern Col-
orado and the Pikes Peak region.
The 2015 Deal MakerAward
winners included:
George Jury,
Weichert Commercial Affiliates.
Jury was presented the Legacy
Award for his longtime commit-
ment and honorable representa-
tion of the commercial brokerage
industry in the region, his accom-
plishments over the years as
well as his consistent dedication
to mentoring others within the
industry.
Caleb David
of
Cameron
Butcher Commercial Real Estate
was named Rookie of the Year. He
was recognized as the region’s top
new broker in 2015 with five sales,
10 retail leases, 27 office leases and
four industrial leases completed in
his first 18 months in the business.
Nicola Myers-Murty
and
Randy Miller
of
CBRE
and
Michael Palmer
of
Quantum
Commercial Group Inc.
were
recognized for the Office Transac-
tion of the Year. Myers-Murty,
Miller and Palmer completed the
largest office lease deal in 2015 for
eviCore Healthcare. The transac-
tion involved a 10-year lease for
a 96,000-square-foot floor plate in
the Garden of the Gods corridor.
David Bacon
and
Aaron Horn
of
Colorado Springs Commer-
cial, a Cushman &Wakefield
Alliance
and
Steven Hunsinger
of
Olive Real Estate Group
received the Industrial Transaction
of the Year award. The purchase
of Airport Square involved 67,800
sf of office andwarehouse space
by community nonprofit Silver
Key.
Whitney Johnson, Marty
Johnson
and
Patrick Kersher
of
CBRE
were recognized as recipi-
ents of the Land Transaction of
the Year. The Crest at Woodmen
acquisition involved a redevel-
opment project of 77 acres and
660,000 sf of existing office/manu-
facturing space currently occupied
by Current Inc.
John Rodgers
of
Peak Com-
mercial Properties
was awarded
the Retail Transaction of the Year.
The Lincoln Center is a rede-
velopment project of a former
elementary school, which will be
transformed into a business center
that will include retail for a barber,
brewery, fitness center and office
uses.
The Southern Colorado Com-
mercial Brokers was formed in
late 2014, replacing the former
professional organization, the
Realtor Commercial and Indus-
trial Society.
s
Three
AIA Colorado
members
were elevated to theAmerican
Institute of Architects College of
Fellows by the organization’s 2016
Jury of Fellows.
Paul C. Hutton, FAIA, Ned
Kirschbaum, FAIA,
and
Andy
Nielsen, FAIA
received the honor
for significant contributions to the
profession and to society.
Withmore than 30 years’ expe-
rience in architecture, Hutton is
the chief sus-
tainability offi-
cer at Cuning-
hamGroup
Architecture in
Denver.
Kirschbaum
is the principal
and director
of techni-
cal design
at Fentress
Architects in
Denver.
Nielsen is
a principal
at Anderson
Mason Dale
Architects in
Denver who
has more than
two decades’
experience in
architecture.
Hutton,
Kirschbaum
and Nielsen
will be hon-
ored at an
investiture
ceremony
at the 2016
National AIA
Convention in
Philadelphia
inMay.
Out of a
total AIAmembership of nearly
88,000 members, there are fewer
than 3,100 distinguished Fellows
and Honorary Fellows.
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Swingle Lawn, Tree & Land-
scape Care
promoted teammem-
bers
Nick Gonzalez
and
Jacob
Heil.
Gonzalez joined the company
in 2006. He is the supervisor of
enhancement services-pruning at
the firm’s Denver location.
Heil joined the firm in 2013
and since has been promoted to
supervisor of protection services
at Swingle’s Firestone branch. He
received a business marketing
degree from the University of
Northern Colorado. He has been
working in the green industry for
six years.
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ISEC Inc.,
a subcontractor and
prime trades contractor provid-
ing architectural woodwork,
ornamental metals and laboratory
casework to
the construc-
tion industry,
promoted
Phil Stancil
to senior esti-
mator and
Megan Davis
to project
manager.
Stancil has
worked at the
company for
more than 15 years in multiple
positions, the last eight years
in estimating. Stancil has been
instrumental in procuring many
key projects for ISEC, among
them the recently awarded Platte
Valley Medical Center and 601
Broadway
(Denver
Health &Hos-
pital Author-
ity Campus).
Davis has
been a part of
the firm for
10 years in
the operations
department,
working on
projects of all scopes and sizes. In
her new role of project manager,
she is working with ISEC’s Spe-
cial Projects Group.
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Real Estate Consultants of
Colorado LLC,
a buyer/tenant
representation firm, recently
added to its team.
David W. Baker
serves as a
commercial consultant to the firm,
utilizing his background as an
attorney to negotiate deals, and
communicate and explain details
of complex transactions to clients.
Prior to joining the firm, Baker
practiced law at a midsize Den-
ver firmwith an emphasis on
construction defect litigation
and clerked for Judge Elizabeth
A. Starrs at the Denver District
Court. While in law school, he
held positions at Brownstein
Hyatt Farber & Schreck and the
law department of Vail Resorts.
Ward J. Scott
also serves as
a commercial consultant to the
firm.
Prior to establishing his career
in commercial real estate, Ward
practiced as an attorney for seven
years, focusing his work in the
areas of natural resources, min-
eral title examination, real estate,
civil litigation, and various busi-
ness and transactional matters.
Ward received his Juris Doctor
from the University of Denver
SturmCollege of Law in 2008,
and returned to earn his Mas-
ter of Laws degree in natural
resources, and environmental law
and policy in 2014.
Before embarking on his legal
career, Ward was a professional
bass player for The Shantee, a
Midwestern band.
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Who’s News
Ian Glaser
Brian Campbell
Andrew Sparn
Paul C. Hutton
Ned Kirschbaum
Andy Nielsen
Phil Stancil
Megan Davis
High Fives!
Dean Callan & Co. recently
presented the 2015 Dean Cal-
lan Recognition Award to Bill
Reynolds of The W.W. Reyn-
olds Cos. and Stephen Tebo of
Tebo Properties.
The award is given annu-
ally to a
member of
the Boulder
c omme r -
cial broker-
age com-
munity in
memory of
Dean Cal-
lan and in
recognition
of hismany
years of dedicated commercial
real estate service. Recipients
are nominated by their peers.
Nominations are based
on exceptional professional
service to clients, respect for
others, integrity, community
involvement, and leadership
andmentoring
In addition to recognition
by the commercial real estate
community, the award grants
a $2,500 charitable contribution
for each recipient. Both Reyn-
olds and Tebo chose the W.W.
Reynolds Foundation as the
charity of their choice, and each
will match the contribution.
Reynolds established the
W.W. Reynolds Foundation
whosemission statement is “To
illustrate and prove to young-
sters that
free market
economics
as advocat-
ed by Mil-
ton Fried-
man and
Freidrich
A u g u s t
Hayek are
the foun-
dation of
America’s freedom.” The foun-
dation is sponsoring the Her-
nando de Soto World Capital
Markets Program at the Uni-
versity of Colorado’s Leeds
School of Business, which will
commence in fall and be intro-
duced to all incoming fresh-
men of the business school.
Dean Callan & Co. is a full-
service commercial real estate
firm specializing in broker-
age, development, property
management and investment
acquisitions.
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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
Submissions should be 200 words or less.
Stephen Tebo
Bill Reynolds
under contract to Denver Arts
& Venues, delivered sections
of the report and renderings
of what the revised complex
might look like at the plan’s
announcement event.
The plan was delivered by the
Executive Leadership Team, a
working group appointed by
Hancock that studied options,
needs and trends in arts over
the past year. The group
received input from more than
4,200 residents, as well as arts
patrons, performers and pre-
senters.
Hancock also announced a
yearlong funding and gover-
nance study to develop the next
steps to build a plan to deliver
on the vision. The funding and
governance group will aim to
provide its recommended plan
by the end of 2016.
Work to diversify and
expand the arts programming,
recommended as part of The
Next Stage vision, will begin
almost immediately. Donations
from the Boettcher Foundation
and the Denver Performing
Arts Complex’s largest resi-
dent company, Denver Center
for the Performing Arts, will
be used to seed and encour-
age the unique programming.
New visual art will appear at
the complex with the expand-
ed programming. Denver
Arts & Venues is committing
$250,000 in public artworks to
be installed over the next year.
“All of us at Arts & Ven-
ues are eager to build on the
vision of The Next Stage,” said
Kent Rice, executive director
of Denver Arts & Venues. “The
exciting new programming
we’re about to start will fur-
ther brand this city and this
neighborhood as the heart of
Denver’s creative and cultural
life.”
s
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