Kremmling moves forward with its $17.5M water treatment plant construction while preparing for summer infrastructure and wildfire resiliency code adoption.
The town of Kremmling is advancing its most significant infrastructure project to date: a $17,540,853 water treatment plant. Currently under construction and proceeding on budget, the project is expected to reach completion by October 2026. The new facility will allow the town to process Colorado River water more effectively, replacing an aging and unreliable plant while providing necessary capacity for future community growth. The town board is actively pursuing an additional $1 million from the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund Loan to further offset construction costs.
Beyond the water project, the town is updating its development standards and addressing wildfire mitigation. Leveraging a Local Planning Capacity Grant, Kremmling is currently finalizing updated engineering and construction standards to streamline future residential and commercial development. Additionally, the town board is evaluating the mandatory adoption of the Colorado Wildfire Resiliency Code, with a decision scheduled for June 17, 2026, to ensure compliance with statewide deadlines for new construction and significant remodels.
Denver International Airport announces a new pedestrian tunnel as part of ongoing expansion efforts at the major aviation hub.
Denver International Airport plans a $300 million to $700 million project to convert unused baggage tunnels into pedestrian walkways connecting concourses A and B.
Pitkin County officials prepare for the 2027 Aspen/Pitkin County Airport modernization project, which includes a terminal redesign and runway upgrades.
Steamboat Springs Transit secures $2.75M in annual funding while managing a fleet of 28 buses and addressing critical upgrades for its aging transit infrastructure.
Routt County secures a $465,000 state grant to fund safety upgrades and multimodal transportation planning at the US Highway 40 and Brandon Circle intersection in Steamboat Springs.
Rifle City Council reviews a $217.5 million, 150-project capital improvement plan for 2026-31 featuring infrastructure upgrades and a potential $10 million police station.
Daily emails covering the projects and news that match your service area, building types, and the project stages you bid on.
Free now — first 50 founding members lock in 30% off at launch.
Free. One click to unsubscribe. No tracking pixels.