BEAR VALLEY CENTER
West Hampden Avenue / US 285 and South Sheridan Boulevard
Denver, Colorado

Greater Denver's eighth mall-type shopping hub originated with BEAR VALLEY CENTER, a 91,000 square foot strip complex dedicated in mid-1959. This retail venue was built on a 32.5-acre site. This was located 11.2 miles southwest of the Colorado Capitol, in a section of Denver City-County known as Bear Valley.

Plans for the strip center had been announced in March 1958. Developed by the Mortgage Investments Company of Denver, the retail facility was designed by Jared B. Morse, of the Mile High City. Charter tenants at the original BEAR VALLEY CENTER included Hodel's Drug, Hube's Barber Shop, the Bear Valley Inn, Dolly Madison Ice Cream Shoppe and a Duckwall's 5 & 10. 

By late 1965, a fully-enclosed mall was being added. Also built by the Mortgage Investments Company, it was to encompass 382,000 leasable square feet and house eighteen stores and services. Denver's Piel, Slater, Small & Spenst firm designed the new mall at BEAR VALLEY CENTER. 

The complex was anchored by a 2-level (139,000 square foot) May-D & F, which opened on August 2, 1966. The mall was officially dedicated between October 17th and 20th of the same year. The grand opening was attended by Bill Nichols (Denver Deputy Mayor) and John McCready (president of the Bear Valley Corporation). Both men participated in a ribbon-cutting.

Charter mall stores included Hickory Farms of Ohio, Kinney Shoes, McMurtry Decorating Center, Dave Cook Sporting Goods and a Duckwall's 5 & 10 (relocated from the adjacent strip center). BEAR VALLEY CENTER consisted of a single level of retail. Its enclosed shopping concourse was decorated in a Turn of the Century motif, with several Victorian-era street lamps. There were also four "miniature mountains" along the corridor , one in a children's play area, another in a Central Court "Rock Grotto." This was highlighted by three waterless -30-foot-high- "WonderFall" fountains.

The strip plaza and mall of BEAR VALLEY CENTER were surrounded by much larger retail hubs. These included VILLA ITALIA (1966) {3.7 miles northwest, in Jefferson County-Lakewood}, CINDERELLA CITY (1968) {2.5 miles east, in Englewood} and -eventually- SOUTHWEST PLAZA (1982) {3.6 miles southwest, in Jefferson County}.

May D & F at BEAR VALLEY CENTER closed for good in 1985, with its space being taken by Burlington Coat Factory in October. The shopping concourse was given a face lift in 1989. This renovation proved unsuccessful and the complex was in a downward spiral by the early 1990s. 

In June 1993, a joint venture of Denver-based Chandelle Development and the Cook Family acquired the struggling shopping center. Two thirds of the mall structure was torn down, leaving the eastern section standing. Originally, Burlington Coat Factory, in the demolished section, was going to relocate into a newly-built store. This never happened.

Instead, the Burlington store closed for good. A 1-level (75,000 square foot) King Soopers SuperStore replaced the razed section of the mall in 1994. A motion picture venue, the Super Saver Bear Valley 8, was installed in the remaining shopping mall section. New stores in the strip center included Fashion Bug, Paper Warehouse and Mountain Mike's Pizza. Westwood College of Technology established a campus in the freestanding First National Bank of Bear Valley building.

By 1999, nearly all that remained of the circa-1966 mall had been knocked down. A small 7,400 square foot section was salvaged. This became sandwiched between King Soopers and a 1-level (118,700 square foot) Home Depot, that was dedicated in June 2002. The late '50s strip center remained intact.

BEAR VALLEY CENTER, which now enveloped 342,700 leasable square feet and fifty-three retail spaces, was acquired by Dallas-based P.O'B. Montgomery & Company in June 2003. In 2011, the remaining 7,400 square foot section of the mall was razed. The existing King Soopers was expanded into its area, with the newly-renovated (100,000 square foot) store holding its grand opening in May 2012.

Sources:

The Denver Post
The Aurora Advocate (Aurora, Colorado)
Cervi's Rocky Mountain Journal (Denver, Colorado)
The Colorado Transcript (Golden, Colorado)
The Broomfield Star-Builder (Broomfield, Colorado)
Denver County, Colorado tax assessor website
National Registry of Historic Places / Multiple Property Documentation Forum / United States Department of the Interior / National Park Service / "Historic Residential Subdivisions of Denver, 1940-1965" / Revised March 1992 and October 2010
Retro Denver / Pam Arceo
P'OB Montgomery & Company
CB Richard Ellis
http://www.loopnet.com
http://www.benchmarkop.com