Gonzalez Apartments LLC submitted 127 building permits in just 39 days, marking one of the most aggressive filing sprints ever recorded in Denver's municipal database.

This rapid acceleration in the Northeast Denver and Cole neighborhoods correlates with a sharp increase in construction-related fires and safety incidents across the city, raising questions about whether compressed approval cycles compromise on-site safety protocols.

The data reveals a distinct pattern of high-volume filings concentrated in early 2026. Between February and April, the developer filed ten site plans alone, transitioning the long-delayed Rock Drill redevelopment in the Cole neighborhood from planning to active construction. By April 27, the company had filed 53 permits in a single 19-day window. That number climbed to 59 permits in the following 20 days. By May 4, the total reached 127 permits filed in less than six weeks.

These filings are not isolated events but part of a broader shift in how developers operate. Recent municipal records indicate permit approval cycles have shrunk to single digits citywide, allowing projects to move from submission to ground-breaking at unprecedented speeds. This efficiency comes as the city pushes to convert office buildings and build new housing units rapidly.

The concentration of activity in specific zones like Cole and Northeast Denver creates a unique pressure on local infrastructure and safety resources. While the ten site plans filed in early April signaled a coordinated shift to high-density construction, the speed of execution has drawn attention from safety officials monitoring the rise in construction fires.

City officials and fire marshals are expected to review the safety compliance records for these accelerated projects in the coming weeks. As the Link 56 project and other developments break ground, the city must balance its housing goals with the need to ensure that compressed timelines do not lead to preventable hazards.