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Proposed Roxborough “Nordic spa” faces opposition from neighbors, golf course

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A Canadian developer planning to build a warm-water attraction next to Arrowhead Golf Course in Douglas County has received a cold reception from neighbors, including the course operator.

“A commercial development in this neighborhood would be a colossal disaster. Not just for the wildlife, but for the people who live here,” said Bridget Epp, 64, who’s lived in the community for eight years.

Epp is a leader of the local “Save our Rox” group, which for the last three years has been pushing back against plans to develop a 35-acre site largely surrounded by the golf course. The land features towering, jagged red rock formations similar to those seen in nearby Roxborough State Park and Red Rocks in Morrison.

And earlier this month, Pomeroy Lodging, a firm based in Calgary, purchased the land for $3.5 million.

“The location speaks for itself … It’s a pretty spectacular piece of property,” said Ryan Laurie, Pomeroy’s director of asset management.

Pomeroy wants to erect what it calls a “Nordic spa” on the parcel. It likely will consist “of a collection of pools, saunas, steam rooms and indoor and outdoor relaxation spaces, also offering massage treatments and ancillary food & beverage and retail offerings,” according to documents the developer submitted to the county. Unlike hot springs, it would not use naturally heated water.

Pomeroy operates two other Nordic spas in Alaska and Alberta, along with a chain of hotels across Canada. This spa would be the company’s first development in the continental U.S.

The entire development likely won’t exceed 40,000 square feet and will operate from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily, according to the documents. It would bring hundreds more cars through the Roxborough Park community.

The setting is the primary source of contention between the developer and nearby homeowners, who see the land as the “heartbeat” of their 1,056-home community.

Roxborough’s unique geology is part of the “Ancestral Rockies,” red rock formations that predate the modern Rocky Mountains by hundreds of millions of years. Eventually, these rocky red spires served as the nucleus for a housing development and golf course founded in the 1970s.

Since the neighborhood’s inception, the land Pomeroy purchased, known as “The Homestead,” was planned for residential development, per a letter submitted to Douglas County by the neighborhood’s HOA president, Brian Lence.



A Canadian developer planning to build a warm-water attraction next to Arrowhead Golf Course in Douglas County has received a cold reception from neighbors, including the course operator.

“A commercial development in this neighborhood would be a colossal disaster. Not just for the wildlife, but for the people who live here,” said Bridget Epp, 64, who’s lived in the community for eight years.

Epp is a leader of the local “Save our Rox” group, which for the last three years has been pushing back against plans to develop a 35-acre site largely surrounded by the golf course. The land features towering, jagged red rock formations similar to those seen in nearby Roxborough State Park and Red Rocks in Morrison.

And earlier this month, Pomeroy Lodging, a firm based in Calgary, purchased the land for $3.5 million.

“The location speaks for itself … It’s a pretty spectacular piece of property,” said Ryan Laurie, Pomeroy’s director of asset management.

Pomeroy wants to erect what it calls a “Nordic spa” on the parcel. It likely will consist “of a collection of pools, saunas, steam rooms and indoor and outdoor relaxation spaces, also offering massage treatments and ancillary food & beverage and retail offerings,” according to documents the developer submitted to the county. Unlike hot springs, it would not use naturally heated water.

Pomeroy operates two other Nordic spas in Alaska and Alberta, along with a chain of hotels across Canada. This spa would be the company’s first development in the continental U.S.

The entire development likely won’t exceed 40,000 square feet and will operate from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily, according to the documents. It would bring hundreds more cars through the Roxborough Park community.

The setting is the primary source of contention between the developer and nearby homeowners, who see the land as the “heartbeat” of their 1,056-home community.

Roxborough’s unique geology is part of the “Ancestral Rockies,” red rock formations that predate the modern Rocky Mountains by hundreds of millions of years. Eventually, these rocky red spires served as the nucleus for a housing development and golf course founded in the 1970s.

Since the neighborhood’s inception, the land Pomeroy purchased, known as “The Homestead,” was planned for residential development, per a letter submitted to Douglas County by the neighborhood’s HOA president, Brian Lence.

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