
Microgrants now being offered to business owners on East Colfax in Denver
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Colfax businesses can get up to $1,500 to help with BRT construction impacts
The Colfax Ave Business Improvement District is offering up to $1,500 for impacted businesses between Grant and Josephine streets. The grants are reserved for businesses that have lost at least 10 percent of revenue. The $300 million BRT project started in October and has since torn up the urban corridor, putting up fences and snarling traffic. The reception to the project has been mixed — while many are optimistic about the promise of a safer, more efficient Colfax, business owners say it has negatively impacted their revenue. But crews have already begun installation of dozens of arches that will serve as the spine of BRT bus stops.
Businesses on Colfax Avenue can get a little more help with the impacts of heavy construction on the commercial stretch.
The Colfax Ave Business Improvement District is offering up to $1,500 for impacted businesses between Grant and Josephine streets affected by the bus-rapid transit project on the street.
Construction on the $300 million BRT project started in October and has since torn up the urban corridor, putting up fences and snarling traffic in the name of building a better bus system. The reception to the project has been mixed — while many are optimistic about the promise of a safer, more efficient Colfax, business owners say it has negatively impacted their revenue.
The new “micro-grants” from the business district come in addition to earlier city grants. They are meant for businesses that missed out on earlier city grants, which offered up to $15,000 available for businesses that had seen revenue declines of 20 percent or more.
The new BID grants are much smaller, ranging from $500 to $1,500, and can be used for operating expenses such as rent, payroll, emergency repairs and more. The grants are reserved for businesses that have lost at least 10 percent of revenue.
How is BRT impacting businesses?
While there have been business closures, some of the vacant storefronts have been quickly occupied by new businesses eager to open their doors, like Argentinian empanada joint Maria Empanada’s new location in Congress Park.
According to the city’s project timeline, the current phase of BRT construction is about a third of the way done. The project is moving in overlapping phases, slowly shifting east over a three-year timeline. Frank Locantore, the Colfax BID’s executive director, said the avenue has a long way to go.
“Because of the construction, because of the price of eggs and labor and everything, it’s still a very difficult time to run a business,” he said.
Foot traffic from the Denver Pride Parade will also be reduced this year, as the route has been redirected from the traditional path along Colfax and has instead been moved to 17th Avenue, due to BRT construction.
There are signs of progress, however.
Notably, crews have already begun installation of dozens of arches that will serve as the spine of BRT bus stops.
Two businesses, Tight End and Uptown Banh Mi, have thrown parties to celebrate the milestones.
Business owners on Colfax worried about years of construction
The Colfax Bus Rapid Transit project (BRT) is underway along East Colfax Avenue. Small businesses along the route aren’t sure they’ll last until its scheduled completion in 2027. The city is offering $1.8 million in grants to help affected businesses. The Upper Colfax Community Foundation is working to raise funds through Colorado Gives Day to share as micro-grants.”It’s almost impossible to cover all my bills every month, and I’ve maxed out all my cards,” said Jimmy “Zez” Shores, owner of Sincerely Tattoo on Colfax. “The product’s going to be great, but great for who?” Shores asked.
DENVER — The Colfax Bus Rapid Transit project (BRT) is underway along East Colfax Avenue. Once complete, the project aims to reduce travel time and provide more reliable access to shops and restaurants. However, small businesses along the route aren’t sure they’ll last until its scheduled completion in 2027.
Jimmy “Zez” Shores is the owner of Sincerely Tattoo on East Colfax. He’s also one of the founding members of the East Colfax Community Collective. He shared that he, alongside other business owners, began the group in response to concerns they saw with the BRT project.
“We went to some of the meetings five or six years ago and we saw that the plan that had been made 20 years ago didn’t include any subsidies for small businesses to stay in place,” Shores said. “We started trying to figure that out, and that’s why we started the East Colfax Community Collective because we knew there wasn’t going to be a safety net for these small businesses.”
Shores shared that a safety net is sorely needed. When speaking of his own business, he’s seen dramatic changes since construction first started.
“It’s cut our business in half,” Shores said. “People aren’t using Colfax corridors much anymore. They know there’s construction here. They know you’re going to get dwindled down to one lane, going both ways. It’s going to take an hour to get through. It’s almost impossible to cover all my bills every month, and I’ve maxed out all my cards, and I’m not the only one seeing it.”
The city is offering $1.8 million in grants to help affected businesses. However, applications won’t open until early next year. Shores is uncertain if his business and others in the area can survive in the interim.
“Once you sign up, it always takes weeks or months to get these grants,” Shores said. “So, it may be released in January. When are you going to get it by? May? Again, that’s a whole year from when we started this whole debacle, and by then more businesses are going to be out of business. More people will have suffered.”
Although scared for the future of his business, Shores said he doesn’t think the project is bad. He explained that he’s excited to see the new transit system and the benefit that will provide to the area. However, he also wants to know that his shop will still be around when it’s complete.
“The product’s going to be great, but great for who? A whole new community on Colfax?” Shores asked. “That’s not the people that built it. Who’s it going to be great for? Not the people that live here, that work here, that have businesses here…we might not survive.”
Along with grants from the city, the Upper Colfax Community Foundation is working to raise funds through Colorado Gives Day. It has a goal of raising $50,000 to share as micro-grants.
Shores hopes more immediate assistance can help keep struggling businesses afloat.
‘I’d rather go through COVID again’: Businesses struggle with Colfax BRT construction
Construction on the $300 million Colfax Bus Rapid Transit project started in October. The project aims to transform one of Denver’s busiest roads into a public transit paradise. To get from Shish Kabob Grill to Capitol Hill Books, pedestrians have to navigate fences and sidewalk closures. Construction on BRT is scheduled through 2027, with sections of the project under construction for over a year at a time. The city has identified five construction segments; some of the segments will be under construction at the same time, the city says. It’s the first of its kind of project in the region of the Colorado State Capitol and the Denver International Airport in the city’s downtown area. The Colfax BRT project has been in the works for more than a decade and is scheduled to be completed in 2027. It will be the first part of a larger network of BRT routes in the Denver area, the Denver Department of Transportation and Infrastructure says. For more information, visit Denver.gov/BRT.
It’s lunchtime at Bourbon Grill, the Cajun barbecue hole-in-the-wall at Colfax Avenue and Pearl Street.
Known for piling massive portions of saucy, grilled chicken, mac-and-cheese and rice into styrofoam boxes, Bourbon Grill often has a line at the door.
But on a cold Monday, Bourbon Grill’s workers were uncharacteristically idle. In fact, it had been slow for a few days now.
“We had a record low. The lowest [sales] we ever did was two days ago,” said Mac Vo, who is part of the family that owns the restaurant. Their sales for that day: “$165.”
To stay optimistic, Vo and the rest of the workers initially chalked it up to the cold weather. But they thought there was a bigger cause. Ever since construction on the $300 million Colfax Bus Rapid Transit project started in October, business has been trending downward for Bourbon Grill and its neighbors.
“How could we prepare for it?” Vo asked.
‘Now it’s even more dead’
The Colfax BRT project aims to transform one of Denver’s busiest roads into a public transit paradise. New trees, better lighting, dedicated bus lanes, nicer stops and reliable service are meant to get more people on the 15 and 15L bus routes.
Construction on BRT is scheduled through 2027, with sections of the project under construction for over a year at a time. The city has identified five construction segments; some of the segments will be under construction at the same time.
A schedule of East Colfax Bus Rapid Transit construction. Courtesy of Denver Department of Transportation and Infrastructure.
This year, construction will stretch along three segments — from Broadway to approximately Monaco Street Parkway.
Construction started near Colfax and Grant, where Obeid Kaifo saw cones and heavy machinery block the sidewalks near his family’s Shish Kabob Grill.
Zeid Kaifo wraps a pita. Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite Shish Kabob Grill on East Colfax Avenue. Jan. 14, 2025. Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
Kaifo, who has worked at the Eastern Mediterranean restaurant since he was 14, said foot traffic in the area has been slow since 2020 and the COVID-19 pandemic. He said it hasn’t recovered yet, as customers have been eating at home and saving money.
“There’s not much activity and on top of it, the construction, it just makes it a hundredfold worse,” Kaifo said. “If you thought we were dead before, well now you’re annoying everybody, and now it’s even more dead.”
For a mile-long stretch of Colfax — between the Colorado State Capitol and the diagonal Park Avenue — orange cones plaster the street. Concrete barriers stand in front of some businesses as crews tear up the street — occasionally digging up ghosts of Denver’s public transit past.
Juneid (left) and Obeid Kaifo work behind the counter in Shish Kabob Grill, their family’s East Colfax Avenue restaurant. Jan. 14, 2025. Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
Drivers aren’t the only ones dealing with closures. To get from Shish Kabob Grill to Capitol Hill Books — just across the street — pedestrians have to navigate fences and sidewalk closures.
In the bookstore, Holly Brooks sat alone at the counter, eagerly waiting for customers. Like Kaifo and Vo, the longtime owner of the bookstore hasn’t had much luck lately. Brooks, who said she already works for free, said she’s not sure how much longer they can survive with the BRT project’s impact on foot traffic.
“We had to let one guy go because that payroll was just too much,” Brooks said.
Holly Brooks, the founder of Capitol Hill Books, runs the counter at the East Colfax Avenue shop. Jan. 14, 2025. Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
Parking for customers, already a rare luxury along Colfax, has decreased, with construction blocking off curb spots — something that’s annoying takeout customers.
“They’re mostly complaining it takes some 15, 20 minutes to find parking,” Vo said.
Will the BRT project change the Colfax vibe?
BRT has been in the works for over a decade. It’s the first project of its kind in the region.
Planners envision it as part of a network of speedy buses that connects the Front Range. Besides benefiting commuters, supporters believe BRT will bring foot traffic to Colfax businesses.
Inside Capitol Hill Books on East Colfax Avenue. Jan. 14, 2025. Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite Capitol Hill Books on East Colfax Avenue. Jan. 14, 2025. Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
Many business owners and workers Denverite spoke to weren’t entirely sold on that vision. While some are more optimistic, almost all shared a question: Will the project be worth the pain of construction?
“At the end of the day, if this thing is built and it’s a great big thing and we get all this business, but we lost 25 businesses in the process, it wasn’t worth it,” said Alex Barakos, who runs Pete’s Kitchen.
Alex Barakos (left) and Vincent Olquin run the counter at Pete’s Kitchen. Jan. 25, 2025. Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
Denon Moore, the business support director for the Colfax Ave Business Improvement District, said major construction has hurt businesses in other parts of town, too.
“If we look at the impacts that construction had on Broadway, there were losses,” Moore said. “And so I think some of it is inevitable.”
City officials have defended the BRT vision — they say it will help Denver reduce greenhouse gas emissions while improving road safety and mobility.
“This is something that needs to happen,” Councilmember Amanda Sawyer said in 2022.
Some parts of Colfax are more prepared than others
About two miles away from the construction zone, businesses in a starkly different side of Colfax watch intently to see how the BRT is going for their western counterparts. The project will be coming to their blocks imminently, with traffic cones already approaching Josephine.
Bookended by the Sie FilmCenter and Tattered Cover on one end and National Jewish Health on the other, this section of Colfax boasts nationally recognized restaurants, a summer farmer’s market, salons and a handful of independent thrift stores.
Cones line East Colfax Avenue as bus-rapid-transit construction creeps eastward. Jan. 25, 2025. Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
Some businesses in the area hope the makeup of these blocks will help them survive construction.
“I think we have probably a better chance of making it out alive during this just because of the residential area and the nature of what these businesses are,” said Holli Turner, owner of salon Big Hairy Monster.
Holli Turner cuts Dan Bon’s hair in her Big Hairy Monster salon on East Colfax Avenue. Jan. 25, 2025. Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
Chip Litherland, owner of punk rock-themed antiques shop Scavenged Goods, said he’s planning to grow his social media presence to counter any foot traffic declines.
“My customers are fiercely loyal,” he said. “I have customers that come in every day. I have customers that travel from all over.”
Scavenged Goods owner Chip Litherland in his East Colfax Avenue vintage shop. Jan. 23, 2025. Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite Magazines and tchotchkes for sale at Scavenged Goods. Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
Some on this side of Colfax, however, are not as prepared.
Phil Cardenas, who moved freeze-dried candy shop Mile High Sweets and Treats to Colfax from Central Park in late November, said he expects he’ll have to rely on event sales more than ever to make up for lost business from BRT.
“Had I known, I would’ve never set up shop here,” he said.
Phil Cardenas stands behind the counter at Mile High Sweets and Treats, his freeze-dried candy shop on East Colfax Avenue. Jan. 24, 2025.
Will customers step up again?
City officials have promised federal funds to support small businesses through a grant program. The Denver Economic Development and Opportunity office plans to open applications in March.
About $2.8 million was set aside in the city’s 2025 budget for grants, a figure that drew criticism from some city officials for being too low.
The grants will compare at least 90 days of pre-construction revenue to revenue from the first 90 days of construction and could award the difference between the two. Businesses that sell cannabis are ineligible due to federal constraints.
Drivers line up next to a lane full of constructon on E. Colfax Avenue. Jan. 24, 2025. Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
The Colfax Avenue Business Improvement District is also fundraising for a micro-grant program.
“This isn’t going to keep someone in business, but maybe it’s going to help, maybe $1,000 is going to help them cover their grocery costs for the week or some of their payroll, or it pays part of the rent to just hopefully ease something for a small moment,” Moore said.
Still, some business owners are worried the grants aren’t adequate, especially compared to the substantial money given during the pandemic.
“I’d rather go through Covid again just because of those two relief packages,” said Barakos of Pete’s Kitchen.
Inside Pete’s Kitchen on East Colfax Avenue. Jan. 25, 2025. Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite
Kaifo, of Shish Kabob Grill, believes survival depends on whether businesses can rouse customers to support them — like they did in the pandemic. In 2020, customers would call them just to throw money at them.
“People were thinking that because they didn’t want to lose the places that they appreciate,” he said. “They were worried about them being lost in the pandemic.”
For Kaifo and others, COVID and BRT construction are a brutal set of blows in a relatively short period. And only time will tell if it’s a knockout.