Axios Boulder

September 10, 2025
✈️ Happy Wednesday. Halfway there.
🌦️ Today's weather: Highs in the 80s with a chance of afternoon storms.
Today's newsletter is 464 words — a 2-minute read.
1 big thing: Student housing rents rise slower than market rates

On average, student rents grew slower than market-rate leases in Boulder over the past five years, according to Moody's data shared with Axios.
Why it matters: Expensive student housing, including at University of Colorado Boulder, adds to the already-high cost of college.
By the numbers: Average student rents grew by 16.8%% from 2020 to 2025 in Boulder, while average market-rate rents increased 22.4%.
Zoom in: Limited supply has been a historical problem for Boulder both in the student and multi-family housing market, but several large projects are in the works.
What we're watching: CU Boulder is seeking regents' approval for a 400-unit on-campus student housing building next to the University Heights neighborhood.
- A Chicago-based developer is trying to turn the Naropa University campus at 2130 Arapahoe Ave. into multi-building housing with more than 100 units.
- The Saddle Creek development at 90 Arapahoe Ave. proposes 46 attached for-sale homes, including duplexes and triplexes.
- Boulder officials plan to break ground on the massive Alpine-Balsam redevelopment project next week.
- The Alpine-Balsam project is scheduled to include 150 permanently affordable housing units, with work on those set to begin in 2026.
Between the lines: When rents rise in a metro area, student housing tends to follow, research suggests.
- Strong demand to live near campus can also keep student rents high. So can luxury apartments (think: saunas, yoga studios and infinity pools), which have gone up in many student housing markets.
The bottom line: "While multifamily rents continue to command higher rates, the rapid growth in student housing rents is creating a mounting affordability crisis for students," according to a recent Moody's analysis.
- The financial strain could limit access to higher education, especially for lower-income students.
2. The Bubble: Bear scratches man
🐻 A bear scratched a man walking his two dogs Saturday on High Street, about four blocks north of Pearl Street. (Daily Camera 🔑)
🏈 ESPN's Pete Thamel reported that Ryan Staub is expected to start against Houston on Friday night, but head coach Deion Sanders did not make anything official at his press conference Tuesday. (Buffzone 🔑)
💨 Boulder-based cannabis company Green Dot Labs has expanded into Arizona, the company's first venture outside of Colorado. (BizWest 🔑)
3. 👋 Meet the Locals

This week I went to D.C. for my first Axios retreat, and at one point we ended up in a baseball stadium.
Why it matters: I finally got to meet all the cool folks that make this thing work.
What's next: D.C. is fun, but I am also submitting my proposal for the 2026 retreat to be held in Waikiki.
✈️ Mitchell is flying back to Colorado today.
Thanks to Gigi Sukin for editing.
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