Ex-Lawmakers, Socialist City Councilmember Fight Putting New Housing on Shuttered Denver Golf Course
An oddball coalition of neighborhood activists and left-wing politicians have opposed plans to convert the privately owned site to housing, citing the loss of open space and impacts on gentrification.

As housing costs mount in cities across the country, an increasingly popular idea is converting urban golf courses into new homes. On paper, it seems like a great plan.
Golf courses often take up a tremendous amount of prime real estate for a sport only few people play. Meanwhile, developers and policy makers alike are keen to site new housing on land that doesn't involve the expensive and often politically fraught prospect of tearing down existing homes or businesses.
But the idea of repurposing putting greens for people is easier said than done, as evidenced by a bitter, years-long battle over the redevelopment of a private golf course in Denver, Colorado.
In Denver's Park Hill neighborhood, sits a shuttered 155-acre private 18-hole golf course that hasn't had a game played on it since 2018. The owner of the site, real estate company Westside, would like to turn the disused course into a mixed-use, mixed-income neighborhood featuring thousands of new homes, businesses, and a public park.
Doing so, they say, will help ease Denver's ease mounting housing affordability pressures while also gifting the city what would be Denver's fourth largest park. One 2022 report found that the Denver metro area had produced 69,000 fewer units than it needed.
"We have an actual plan with clarity around what we're going to do and commitments in terms of community benefits and a financing mechanism to do that," says Kenneth Ho, a principal at Westside.
It's a plan that's won the support of local YIMBY activists, affordable housing developers like Habitat for Humanity, and a majority of the Denver City Council.
"It's an abandoned golf course right now," says Tobin Stone, an activist with the housing advocacy YIMBY Denver. "The working class cannot afford to live in Denver right now. The best thing we can do is approve every big development that comes before us."
But not everyone is so keen on big development.
Opposing Westside's project is a motley crew of neighborhood activists, former Democratic lawmakers, and Denver's one socialist city councilmember. All are fighting tooth and nail to stop new housing from popping up on the site. Instead, they're demanding that all the golf course land, instead of a mere majority of it, remain as open space.
"The environmental impact of developing on green space instead of walking across the street and developing those hundreds of acres made no sense whatsoever," Harry Doby, who resides near the Park Hill site and is an activist with the group Save Open Spaces (SOS) Denver.
Come April, city voters will decide in a referendum whether the Park Hill golf course will be redeveloped into homes and businesses, or if it remains a disused golf course.
Supporters and opponents are both hoping it will be the last word in a fight over the golf course's future that's been raging since 2019.
It was that year that Westside purchased the property. The plan had always been to transform the site into a mixed-use development in a rapidly growing area of Denver. Over the course of the next three years, it worked closely with the city government to hash out a detailed development plan for the site.
Their vision is to turn 55 acres of the 155-acre public golf course into 3,200 units of housing plus commercial and retail space. At least a quarter of the new homes, per Westside's development agreement with the city, will have to be income-restricted units offered at below-market rates.
Westside is also agreeing to donate 80 acres of the site to the city, and dedicate the remaining acreage to parks and open space.*
The one major roadblock to Westside's plans is a 25-year-old conservation easement. In 1997, Denver paid the former owner of the site, Clayton Trust, $2 million to agree to keep the land as a golf course.
Putting new housing on the Park Hill site requires the easement to be lifted.
Westside's efforts to eliminate it have kicked up a storm of controversy from neighbors who've made a panoply of arguments against building on the old golf course.
Doby argues that developing the Park Hill site will be a huge loss for the environment. "In a climate crisis, in a heat island with a deficit of trees, you don't cut them down and build on top of it. Not when you have alternatives that are equal and better," he says, saying development would be more appropriate on nearby industrial properties.
These arguments have resonated with current and former elected officials and the city's major daily newspaper.
Denver City Councilwoman Candi CdeBaca, a member of the Democratic Socialists of America, has also criticized Westside's development in various venues for its alleged environmental harms and for spurring gentrification.
The Denver Post has also come out against the project in a recent editorial in which it argued the city's plan to lift the easement amounted to a "sweetheart deal" for Westside. The added development potential would massively increase the value of the company's land far in excess of the community benefits they've agreed to provide, argues the Post.
It's an argument that ignores the communitywide benefits of adding housing to the city. By the Post's logic, the city also massively underpaid the former Park Hill owner to accept the conservation easement given how much development potential it cost them.
Nearly a dozen former Democratic state legislators and former city elected officials have come out against the project as well.
Those former officials have joined as plaintiffs in two separate lawsuits filed by SOS Denver. Both suits argue that a court order is required to dissolve the Park Hill conservation easement, and that city actions preparing for development on the site are therefore illegal.
The first such lawsuit was quickly dismissed in early 2022, with a Denver District Court judge ruling that the plaintiffs lacked standing and a court order is not in fact required to lift the easement covering Park Hill.
SOS Denver's second, very similar lawsuit, which is again joined by several former elected officials, was filed two weeks ago. The plaintiffs are being represented by Tierney Lawrence Stiles, LLC, a self-described "progressive" law firm that specializes in representing nonprofits.
While critics of the Park Hill development have so far failed in court and at city hall, they have had more luck at the ballot box.
In 2021, SOS Denver placed an initiative on the Denver ballot that would require the lifting of conservation easements to be put to a public vote. It passed with an overwhelming 64 percent of the vote. A Westside-backed ballot initiative that would have effectively exempted their property from this referendum requirement failed by a similarly wide margin.
In late January 2023, the Denver City Council considered whether to approve Westside's Park Hill project and send the issue to voters. It became a heated clash of visions between supporters and critics of the development.
Opponents re-upped their arguments that the city would be losing irreplaceable open space by moving ahead with the development, all just to placate a wealthy developer.
"No one is talking about how potentially 10,000 new residents will impact traffic and quality of life," said one opponent. Westside's promise to keep half the site as open space "would be like living with half a lung," said another.
"See if you see anyone tonight say 'gosh I can't wait for 12-story buildings across from my house'," said one project opponent during the hearing. "I can't wait for 12-story buildings to be honest," Stone shot back during his time at the mic in a now-viral Twitter exchange.
Genuinely one of my proudest moments. https://t.co/BLuhZVKSn0 pic.twitter.com/8iEPiZR0FQ
— Tobin Stone ???? (@tobinjstone) January 24, 2023
Other project supporters argued that building housing for people should be the city's priority, not preserving open space. "I hear people talking about birds. I love birds. But they're not more important than putting roofs over people's heads," said one woman in attendance.
These arguments proved convincing enough for most of the city council. The three holdouts included councilmembers Amanda Sandoval, Paul Kashmann, and CdeBaca, the latter raising a long list of objections at the January hearing. Westside would build units too fast and exceed the infrastructure needed to support it, she argued. She also said Westside would build units too slowly, meaning that rapidly rising incomes would erode the affordability gains from the project's income-restricted units (whose rents and sale prices are based on the area's median income).
"This is absolutely not a rezoning I would support even if the affordably is real," CdeBaca concluded.
Those complaints notwithstanding, the city council voted 10–3 to put the Park Hill development before voters.
Doby, who is also treasurer of the "no" campaign, says he expects voting residents will see the Westside project for the raw deal that it is and shoot it down.
"It's a bad deal for Denver because we're giving away what we now know is more like 100 and something million dollars of development rights," he says. "We get no compensation for that other than 'oh great you can rent an apartment on what used to be a golf course.'"
Ho counters that if their development plan is rejected, the land will just go back to being a closed golf course that benefits no one.
"If we go back to a golf course, no one would be able to access it without paying a fee and walking around hitting a white ball toward a hole," he says.
Correction: The previous version of this article misstated the nature of the open space called for in the development agreement between Westside and the city.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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"If we go back to a golf course, no one would be able to access it without paying a fee and walking around hitting a white ball toward a hole," he says.,
you can almost hear the sneering contempt in his voice. how dare someone enjoy golfing!
I think it’s a fairly reasonable point about it being an elitist use of the space, compared to providing housing to people.
And more to the point, the land belongs to the owner to do with as they wish, not the city. If the city wants the land to stay open space, they should buy it from the developer.
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“One 2022 report found that the Denver metro area had produced 69,000 fewer units than it needed.” This is laughable for its ignorance of economics, by both the author of the report and Christian. What does units needed mean exactly? Unless prices are somehow restricted, which they aren’t in Denver, this is meaningless. Anyone who wants a house at the prevailing price can get one. If you look at the cited report their definition of units needed makes no sense.
Oops. This was not supposed to be a reply to anyone.
Well I’ll reply. Like most every city in the US, it is strictly illegal to create housing supply in most of the city’s acreage. Zoning map of Denver
The light yellow is R1 (single family residential) – no further development allowed – idk the exact % but it is probably 60% or so
The green is park (or golf course) and is also apparently verboten for development Not really shown is streets – which is probably about 20% and only available for ‘camping’.
Price is a function of both supply and demand. When new supply is, quite deliberately, strangled by those who already own the existing supply, then ‘price’ over time is simply rentiership.
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My buddies and I used to play flashlight tag on this course back in the day. And we didn't pay a single fee.
You can also use an orange ball though. Easier to find.
As usual, the Democratic Socialists are pushing policies that are the opposite of what they claim to want. It isn't just the Trump Cult that are nutjobs.
"It isn’t just the Trump Cult that are nutjobs."
TDS-addled shit-piles like you lead the way.
Stuff your TDS up your ass; your head is looking for company
Because someone will own this. Commies don't believe in property. Just drab commie style apartment blocks where everyone can be miserable for "free".
I think you're missing the point of that comment. People opposing the development are arguing that the "public" will lose access to all that open green space which is a nonsense argument because they don't have access to that space today. His point is that you can't lose what you don't have.
I tell ya, golf courses and cemeteries. Biggest wastes of prime real estate.
Is there any better self-description of the lengths statists will go to?
ETA it is also telling how they don't comprehend that charging the developers $100M to build 3200 units will add $30,000 to the price of each unit.
They must have failed arithmetic in elementary school.
This isn't being driven by DeBaca and such like. It's being driven by single family homeowners under the guise of whoever they can sell a pile of shit too
Fucking kulaks!
Uzbeks? They are the weak link in the great chain of socialism.
"...It’s being driven by single family homeowners under the guise of whoever they can sell a pile of shit too..."
JFree looks good in green right?
Your jealousy approaches the level of your stupidity.
I have never understood anti-gentrification activists, and probably never will.
So you would rather this neighborhood remain a slum? Ok . . .
Not to mention a neighborhood which abuts a golf course probably isn't all that low-rent to begin with.
Actually on two sides is I70 (roughly) and a major arterial. The other two sides is R1 zoning. I can see where people might get pissed about the impact on traffic. Like all development now this is massive scale and that truly is crap.
"I have never understood anti-gentrification activists, and probably never will."
What I find even funnier is that turning a private golf course into housing is rather like... de-gentrification? I mean, who exactly is it who uses a private golf club? Probably not the check-out clerk at your local grocery store.
Who uses a CLOSED golf course?
Anybody?
So you would rather this neighborhood remain a slum? Ok . . .
Yes... yes. YES. Once you understand that, you understand anti-gentrification activists.
George Carlin concurs.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GchEbLSY9FY
Carlin lived at 1525 Old Oak Lane, CA 6500 Sq. Feet. Tennis courts and Olympic size swimming pool. Price today is around 11 million; $45,000 a month to rent. Taxes run at $50K a year Heading north and West from Carlin’s LA Mansion: Will Rogers State ParK – 186 acres undeveloped – oh wait – there is a POLO field for people like Carlin. Plus: ‘… a historic stable, a regulation polo field, riding arena, roping area, numerous corrals, horse pastures, GOLF COURSE and lots of trails…’ Beverly Hills – 6000 square foot minimum for single dwelling Malibu Beach Topanga State Park Westridge-Cayonback Wilderness Park Upper Las Virgenes Canyon Open Space preserve Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Point Mugu State Park Marvin Braude Mulholland Gateway Park
George Carlin on line 2 wants his golf course bit back.
>>hasn't had a game played on it since 2018
round. round of golf.
"An oddball coalition of neighborhood activists and left-wing politicians have opposed plans to convert the privately owned site to housing, citing the loss of open space and impacts on gentrification."
NIMBY + environmentalist aka climate change alarmist outranks housing and even homelessness. You gotta get in line and respect the narratives in their rank order.
Golf courses are horrible for the environment. Massive amounts of pesticides and water. Denver is in a rather dry region of the country.
These are fake environmentalists. Just NIMBY's and defenders of inflated housing prices.
An oddball coalition of neighborhood activists and left-wing politicians have opposed plans to convert the privately owned site to housing, citing the loss of open space and impacts on gentrification.
This is not an "odd coalition". It is a completely predictable and understandable one. Read the comments, Reason.
First thing I thought.
It's a TYPICAL leftist/progressive group.
Reason continues to gaslight through feigned ignorance.
At the risk of pointing out the obvious, deeded property in any jurisdiction is not "green space" that belongs to the community. Somebody is paying paying the property tax and maintenance expenses while earning not a dime from golfers. I suspect the holding costs here amount to a pretty big chunk of change. Seems to me the no group wants a private company to maintain a park into perpetuity for the benefit of a handful of neighbors who might not see as many stars at night. If they want it, buy the fucking thing. If they can't raise the cash they can STFU.
If the owner was smart, just put up bunch “No Trespassing “ signs.
You can’t have developers providing housing. That should be left to the government. They do such a fine job at it.
So no one is required to prove that we’re in a ‘climate crisis’ before using it as an argument against literally anything they don’t like? Pretty good cheat code there.
That is correct. It is known. One dare not question it or one shall be accused of heresy.
Cramming 3,200 living units into 55 acres does not seem like "gentrifying". Usually you would only get 220 to 330 homes in that much space.
Clearly it is the real gentrifiers who are opposing this.
>>But they're not more important than putting roofs over people's heads," said one woman in attendance.
who I'm guessing is not a commercial developer or offering her own property
From the article;
Come April, city voters will decide in a referendum whether the Park Hill golf course will be redeveloped into homes and businesses, or if it remains a disused golf course.
This is what's wrong with democracy, the mob can take control of your personal property with a single vote majority!
If the locals want it to remain open then let them pool their funds and buy it! They can then donate it to the city or operate it themselves!
Problem with that is they will seek taxpayer $ to do so, both purchase and operate
The government has always been able to take your property by eminent domain. Even to give it to a private entity. This is specifically mentioned in the US Constitution. You just have to get compensated.
A developer is someone who wants to build a cabin atop a mountain. A conservationist is someone who already owns a cabin atop a mountain.
What's so odd about it??
Who in their non-polluted mind would ever say the left wasn't Power-Mad?
“One 2022 report found that the Denver metro area had produced 69,000 fewer units than it needed.” This is laughable for its ignorance of economics, and a Reason writer should know better. Prices are not restricted in the Denver area. So anyone who wants to buy a house at the prevailing price can get one. The fact that a lot of people would like a house, but don’t want to pay the prevailing price, doesn’t create a shortage, which is what is implied here. If you look at what the report calls “units needed” it has nothing to do with economics or common sense.
How many (formerly) homeless has the socialist city council member let live in the unused rooms of his house(s)?
Or is he Bernie Bro socialist? Talk a good game, but pile up the capitalist goodies.
He has a mansion and a yacht!
OK. Colorado officially added to my list of states to avoid.
I favor curb stomping all the leftists and kicking the real true believers out for good.
Put 8 ft cyclone fencing with gray tarps ziptied to it all around, let it sit for a few years, and see whether those "neighborhood activists" still like it as open space.
“At least a quarter of the new homes... will have to be income-restricted units offered at below-market rates”
Because people in middle & upper neighborhoods don't want to live next to low income housing, having done so I can't blame them. Make the housing market value and restrict to single family or duplex/townhouses and most opposition would go away.
Y’all are missing the point. This land is protected from development by a $2,000,000 conservation easement. That is a permanent restriction on the land to keep it from ever being developed. It does not matter if they want to develop it or not, it cannot be developed. That city council is just acting like the conservation easement does not exist. Now they have a stronger law that says the voters get to decide whether to lift the easement or not.