The concrete structure serving as Lift Station 13 in the 80211 ZIP code is scheduled for removal, marking a pivotal shift in how the city manages wastewater flow.
This decommissioning is not an isolated repair but a key component of a massive infrastructure push that includes a decade-long chilled water contract and ten major utility projects filed across the metro area this spring.
While the immediate work focuses on the station at 80211, the broader strategy aims to prevent system failures before peak summer demand hits. The project involves dismantling the existing lift station infrastructure, a critical node in the local wastewater network, and rerouting flows to more modern facilities. Simultaneously, crews are advancing the Globeville Levee Phase 2 project nearby, addressing storm and wastewater vulnerabilities in the same corridor.
The scope of this utility surge extends well beyond a single neighborhood. Four additional projects have entered the design phase, targeting storm and sanitary upgrades near Sloan's Lake, along E. 16th Avenue in Platt Park, and within the 48th Avenue Greenway. Further south, planning has begun for the Sanderson Gulch storm sewer segment between Florida and Arkansas avenues. These filings follow the recent completion of the GSAN-29th and Speer Sanitary Sewer Replacement, which finished earlier this spring.
For Framingham residents, the context is equally critical as the city prepares its own $40 million sewer system improvement plan for 2025. Ongoing work includes water and sewer replacements on Edgell Road and a long-term project at Central Street and Kellogg Street expected to continue through 2027. The coordinated nature of these filings in Denver and Framingham suggests a regional pivot from reactive repairs to proactive system expansion.
Residents in affected areas should monitor local notices for the transition from design to construction. Public hearings and traffic detours for the new design phases are likely to begin later this year, particularly in the Globeville, Sloan's Lake, and South Denver corridors.