Ninety days ago, the Courtyard on Vine at 1399 N Vine St was just another multi-family building in the 80206 ZIP code. Today, it is the epicenter of a health crisis that has generated 49 separate complaints in that short window.
This surge of filings signals a severe breakdown in living conditions for residents at the complex, which changed hands for $3.15 million in April 2019. The sheer volume of reports—nearly two per day on average—suggests systemic issues rather than isolated incidents, drawing immediate attention from city monitors.
The data, filed on November 3, 2024, paints a stark picture for the neighborhood surrounding Vine Street. While specific complaint details remain internal to the city's tracking system, a count of this magnitude typically points to recurring problems with sanitation, pest control, or hazardous building conditions. In a residential zone, such a spike often forces tenants to seek alternative housing while the property owner scrambles to rectify the root causes.
This is not the first time the Courtyard on Vine has faced scrutiny. The complex, a staple of the local housing stock, has seen significant ownership turnover in recent years. The current wave of complaints represents a critical test of the property's management and the city's ability to enforce health codes before conditions become irreversible.
Residents and neighbors concerned about the situation can attend public meetings at Denver City Hall to voice their concerns directly to officials. For those wishing to track the status of these filings, the city maintains a public portal dedicated to residential health complaints where the latest data is updated regularly.