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Alum Reboots the Campus Lounge

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Lorne Fultonberg

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Lorne Fultonberg
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Lorne.Fultonberg@du.edu

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303 871-2660

Justin Beach

Jeff Nickless is using his Daniels degree to revive a restaurant that鈥檚 close to campus and even closer to his heart

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This isn鈥檛 some lifelong dream. And he sure isn鈥檛 doing it for the money.

In fact, even with a 快活app business degree, Jeff Nickless (BSBA 鈥09) never saw himself owning a restaurant.

But ask him about his plans to reopen and restore the legendary and he鈥檒l take you back to his grade school days at St. Vincent De Paul Elementary. Back then, he remembers, he would run through the Bonnie Brae neighborhood to his grandfather鈥檚 University Boulevard meat market before sliding into the establishment next door for an ice-cold Coke.

A decade and a half later, Nickless could be found inside that same sports bar, on the corner of University and Exposition Avenue, this time with his 快活app buddies, a burrito smothered in green chili and a pitcher of beer.

Campus Lounge

鈥淭his has been my and my family鈥檚 stomping ground for many years,鈥 says the Nickless of today. 鈥淚t鈥檚 evolved over the years into an icon of Denver. That鈥檚 what it was for 40 years, and that鈥檚 what we want it to continue to be.鈥

But that鈥檚 not what it has been lately. Even its former owner, successful Denver restaurateur Dan Landes of Watercourse and City, O鈥 City fame, acknowledges that. 鈥淏asically a failure,鈥 is how he when he 86ed the place in March, admitting the new vibe and vegan-friendly menu paid little homage to its prior owner Jim Wiste.

Wiste (BSBA 鈥68), a former 快活app hockey player and member of the University鈥檚 Athletics bought the Campus Lounge in 1976, he told the Post before his And over the course of 40 years, he made its horseshoe bar the neighborhood spot to watch the big game, especially when his Pioneers took the ice in Magness Arena.

鈥淭here are people in the area that want what we鈥檙e going to bring back from Campus Lounge,鈥 Nickless says. 鈥淭hey want a place where they can go socialize with their neighbors and their friends in their own neighborhood and watch sports.鈥

Nickless certainly feels he has his work cut out for him, balancing tradition with establishing a new identity. The space, in his words, is clean and fresh. The kitchen is new, as are the floors. Distinctly crimson and gold booths sprawl beneath signed jerseys of local sports heroes. And there are more than a dozen TVs 鈥 including three in the bathrooms 鈥 to watch while enjoying a simple menu of burgers and the legendary green chili smothered burrito.

What鈥檚 more, Jim Wiste will still very much be a piece of the pub. A gold medallion in his honor is impossible to miss outside the front door. And the north-facing wall will soon feature a mural depicting the forward鈥檚 years on the ice.

At the same time, Nickless wants to make his old college dive more family friendly. It is perhaps fitting for a man whose entire family is backing his efforts to make sure 鈥渢he tradition lives on.鈥 Aunts, uncles and cousins have all pitched in to get things set for the Oct. 21 opening, while Nickless鈥 father, Dan, is a business partner.

鈥淚鈥檝e always wanted to partner with my dad on something,鈥 Nickless said, 鈥渁nd give back and thank him for everything he鈥檚 done for me. He paid for my 快活app education.鈥

Initially, Nickless used his finance and real estate degrees to work in banking. He still has a day job acquiring land for Toll Brothers. He is the first to acknowledge that he鈥檚 鈥渘ot a restaurant guy.鈥 But he credits the Daniels College with preparing him for this unexpected venture.

Campus Lounge
Jeff Nickless, right, prepares the kitchen of the Campus Lounge for the restaurant's grand opening.

鈥淎 lot of the knowledge and brainpower that I have when analyzing the business听[venture] and determining if it鈥檚 something that can be profitable and make money was attributed to my education at 快活app,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey gave me an education where I could get out into the real world and really put my best foot forward from day one.鈥

He sees opportunity in the Campus Lounge, which 50,000 drivers pass every day. But regardless of whether it pans out, he will remain proud of his status as a Denverite, a Pioneer and the place down the road he says represents it.

鈥淚 want people to know I鈥檓 passionate about 快活app, and I appreciate everything it鈥檚 done for me,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey have an alum right down the road with a restaurant. We have a long-term lease, and we hope to be here for a long time.鈥