The modern apartments that once defined the corner of Mile High Stadium Circle are being erased to make room for warehouses, trucks, and heavy industry.
A coordinated wave of twelve municipal filings over the last quarter reveals that the Turntable Studios complex at 1975 Mile High Stadium Circle is undergoing a complete transformation. What was once a 13-acre residential enclave, selling for $31 million in 2017, is now the target of a $92.5 million redevelopment project focused on logistics.
The timeline is aggressive. Records from mid-June 2026 show a demolition permit and a construction permit issued just five days apart. This rapid sequencing suggests a developer, identified in the filings as Gonzalez Apartments LLC, is moving with urgency to clear the site. The filings detail the systematic removal of the multi-story structure, which previously housed units ranging from 339 to 674 square feet. The goal is not to renovate the existing footprint but to dismantle it entirely and reconfigure the land for commercial use.
This shift accelerates a trend visible across North Denver: the conversion of legacy sports and entertainment zones into industrial assets. While the Denver Broncos look toward Burnham Yard for their next stadium, the Mile High Stadium site is pivoting away from fans and toward freight. Between March and May 2026, initial filings signaled a change in direction, but the pace intensified in June with ten new documents recorded in a single 90-day window. These permits cover everything from structural demolition to site grading, pointing to a unified industrial strategy rather than piecemeal adjustments.
For residents in the 80201 ZIP code, the visual landscape will change dramatically in the coming months. The quiet streets surrounding the former stadium will soon see heavy truck traffic as the site transitions from demolition to active construction. Residents should monitor upcoming utility and grading permits, which will signal the arrival of the new logistics infrastructure. This project marks one of the most significant land-use shifts in the neighborhood's recent history, turning a post-sports era dormitory into a hub for regional distribution.