Fifty health complaints have landed on city desks in just three months, all pointing to a single building: The Alpine at 1330 N Gaylord St.
This cluster of filings in the 80206 ZIP code signals a deepening crisis for residents of the apartment complex, transforming a quiet residential block into a focal point of civic concern. While the city has not yet released the specific nature of these complaints, the volume alone suggests a systemic issue affecting multiple units within the property.
The Alpine, a residential structure containing two-bedroom, one-bathroom units, sits just blocks from the bustling Colfax Avenue corridor. The address has become the epicenter of a growing wave of dissatisfaction, with the city logging 50 distinct filings between October and January. Unlike isolated incidents that might stem from a single noisy tenant or a one-time plumbing failure, this frequency indicates a pattern that city inspectors are likely treating as a priority.
Neighborhoods in this sector of Denver typically value stability and quiet, making a spike of this magnitude particularly disruptive. The complaints were filed starting in early January 2024, though the underlying issues likely predate the formal paperwork. Residents in the surrounding area may have already noticed increased city traffic or construction activity as officials investigate the root causes.
Community members concerned about the situation can attend public meetings related to this matter at Denver City Hall to voice their observations or request updates. For those seeking the raw data behind these filings, the city maintains a public portal where residents can track the status of residential health complaints in real time.