Of the six banners hanging at Morgan Lanes celebrating bowlers’ achievements, four of them belong to Jai May. During the winter bowling season, she has thrown three perfect games, and scored 835 on a series – bowling a perfect 300, a slightly less than perfect 299 and a 236. May has been bowling since she […]
A co-owner and an employee of Edgewater’s Joyride Brewing are launching Live Slow Brewing, which will reopen six of the 12 lanes that used to be Paramount Bowl.
One of the last old-school bowling lanes in Colorado is up for sale;. The owner says the lanes are untenable as property values rise and more people move to the area. He hopes the lanes will stick around for a few years after they are sold.
Family-owned Wheat Ridge Lanes on the market for $4M after six decades
Lily O’Neill photos)
When Dave Hanscom was born in 1964, the first place his parents brought him after leaving Lutheran Medical Center was Wheat Ridge Lanes.
“And I’ve been here ever since,” he said.
Hanscom’s father, Richard, had been working at the bowling alley since it opened in 1958 and purchased the business four days before Dave was born. Later, in 1973, Richard bought the 11,743-square-foot building, which sits on nearly an acre at 6595 W. 38th Ave., for $137,500, according to property records.
Hanscom, 56, bought the business from his dad in 1999, but has been working there in some capacity since he was 11 years old.