Boulder's Millennium Harvest House Set for Demolition After Losing Historic Integrity

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Boulder Hotel News

Harvest House,Boulder History,Cu Student Housing

The historic hotel will soon be replaced with new student housing.

Boulder Historic PreservationThe Millennium Harvest House hotel, a fixture of 28th Street in Boulder since 1959, is soon to be demolished and replaced with student housing for theBoulder's historic preservation program and planning board have approved the demolition, but others argue the destruction will cause Boulder to lose an important piece of its history, including historian Carol Taylor, who has documented the progress of the hotel from dirt lot to golf course to soon-to-be...

After compiling the building's history, Taylor believes the Harvest House should be preserved, despite a decision from the city stating that the physical characteristics of the building no longer maintain its historic character. For a while, it was the closest place to the city to get a drink, as Boulder was still under alcohol prohibition until 1967 and the hotel technically sat outside city limits.

In 1980, further renovations occurred that would later be the reason the hotel will be destroyed. Ownership added two stories to the wings of the hotel, closed off many of the decorative balconies and encased much of the building in stucco. The city compared photos from 1959 and 2021 to determine that the Harvest House has lost its architectural integrity.City staff reviews any buildings over fifty years old set to be demolished and refers those built before 1940 to its board for review.

Although the city did require documentation of the building’s history before demolition, the Harvest House didn't qualify for landmark status. Taylor still thinks the city got it wrong. “There were so many changes to that building over time, and it still went through landmarking, no problem,” Taylor says. “So it's just got to be about the money, right?”, particularly affordable housing. Landmark Properties will pay the city cash in lieu of building affordable housing on the Harvest House site. The city can then use that money to build affordable housing elsewhere — but Taylor contends that the Harvest House could have been transitioned to housing.

 

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