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Hideous Houses in Highland

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Ray Defa, right, lives in the West Highland neighborhood being considered for rezoning, and is one of its major proponents. I live in one of the highest demolition areas in northwest Denver, he says, explaining old, single-family residences in northwest Denver are being destroyed at an average rate of one a week, up from a total of nine during all of 2004. The problem, he says, is that, despite the areas largely single-family character, in the 1950s most of it was re-zoned R2, which allowed for multi-unit residences, to encourage denser development. While that didnt happen, its happening now, he says, with developers scraping off old homes in and around super-hot Highland neighborhoods to replace with big-box multiplexes that are good for their bottom line but not for neighbors. Lately the scrape-off frenzy has reached a fever pitch, says April Butler, left, whos been working on fixing the old house behind her for 15 years: Ive had developers drive onto my property and yell at me to sell my property because I am underutilizing it.
There�s high drama in Highland and Sloan's Lake. On April 28, Denver City Council will consider a proposal to down-zone two areas in those neighborhoods. The local residents who launched the rezoning effort, which would prohibit developers from replacing single-family homes with multiplexes, say it�s the only way to protect the area�s historic housing stock from overdevelopment. Others argue the plan goes against property rights and limits neighborhood enhancement. While the two sides -- armed with yard signs, petitions and arcane zoning rules -- wage a block-by-block war, we decided to take a tour of the neighborhood to see what all the fuss is about. By Joel Warner