The city just halted demolition at the old Wrangler and Be on Key Psychedelic Ripple building at 1700 Logan Street

There is no demolition permit tied to the address listed in online city records.

Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

On Tuesday, bulldozers smashed the graffiti-covered bar that once housed the Wrangler and Be on Key Psychedelic Ripple, at 1700 Logan Street, in North Capitol Hill. The building, which caught fire in May 2020, has been shuttered since.

According to records from the Denver Clerk and Recorder’s Office, the building is owned by Orlin Holdings, LLC.

For months, for-sale signs have hung on the side of the building and continue to, even with half the structure in smithereens.

Now city officials are investigating whether the demolition is happening according to city rules.

The demolition does not appear to be permitted. No applications for demolition or concept site plans tied to the address are listed in the Community Planning and Development database. The last permit tied to the space was in 2017 and for electrical work — fire prevention.

On Tuesday afternoon, the department sent building inspectors to the site to investigate whether the demolition was happening in accordance with the law, said Laura Swartz, a spokesperson for Community Planning and Development.

“We are issuing a stop work order for the site,” Swartz said.

If there are no permits, the bulldozing would be in violation of city rules — a fitting unruly finale for the storied building.

A person who answered the phone at Hobbs & Murphy PC, a Basalt-based certified public accountant and business advisor company listed as the principal registered agent for Orin Holdings, LLC, hung up on Denverite when asked to comment on this story.

Be on Key Psychedelic Ripple, in North Capitol Hill, is on its way to oblivion. Aug. 9, 2022.
Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

This isn’t the first time the building has seen potentially unruly behavior.

For twenty years, 1700 North Logan Street housed the gay bear bar the Wrangler, until it moved to 3090 North Downing Street in Whittier in 2016, where it closed for good in 2018. That building on Downing is now being taken over by a collective of businesses, including a restaurant, an art gallery, an herbal shop and a brewery called Society Colorado.

The Logan Street Wrangler will be remembered for its open urinals where hairy men would flirt while relieving themselves, its patio where endless woof-inspiring debauchery took place, its never-ending flow of beer, and its reputation for having a discriminatory ID policy that was used to keep out transgender people and cis women — a practice protested by the queer community.

Back then, the Wrangler was part of a strip of gay bars on 17th Avenue, including J.R.s, which turned into an Italian restaurant, Pasquini’s, that was demolished to make way for apartments that are under construction.

Be on Key Psychedelic Ripple, in North Capitol Hill, is on its way to oblivion. Aug. 9, 2022.
Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

After the Wrangler moved, the Logan Street bar was home to Deadhead entrepreneur Jay Bianchi’s Be on Key Psychedelic Ripple. The bar was part of his jam-band empire that included Sancho’s Broken Arrow and So Many Roads.

Bianchi’s time at 1700 Logan Street was sullied with accusations of assault. In 2018, he admitted he “did punches” with a musician, Aidan Pagnani, who accused him of attacking him after playing a show at the venue, Westword reported.

Eventually, Pagnani went on to form the Colorado Musician Union that spent months waging a campaign against Bianchi, accusing him of sexual assault, allegations the bar owner denied. Amid protests at other bars he was tied to, Bianchi said he had retired from the business — a retirement than didn’t last long.

In May 2020, the City of Denver shut down Be on Key Psychedelic Ripple over COVID-19 violations. Before it could reopen, a fire blazed through the building and Bianchi’s business shuttered.

 

Be on Key Psychedelic Ripple, in North Capitol Hill, is on its way to oblivion. Aug. 9, 2022.
Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

Kevin J. Beaty assisted with the reporting for this story.