Tofu House’s Convoy location offers food for dine-in and take out with an expansive outdoor dining setup. Photo Courtesy of Tofu House.
Joonsok Kim, said he couldn’t sleep at all the day it was announced that restaurants had to stop serving food indoors due to the coronavirus pandemic. The owner of
, a casual restaurant serving tofu soup and hot-stone Korean barbeque, said “it was a nightmare for me.”
These days, many of the hot-pots are served outdoors under white canopy tents and lit up by strings of light bulbs in the parking spots in front of Tofu House a move that turned the nightmare into a spotlight on his business.
Today
Some clouds this evening will give way to mainly clear skies overnight. Low near 45F. Winds NNW at 5 to 10 mph..
Tonight
Some clouds this evening will give way to mainly clear skies overnight. Low near 45F. Winds NNW at 5 to 10 mph. Updated: May 14, 2021 @ 6:51 pm
A Chicago real estate company that develops and acquires multifamily and student housing projects is entering the Colorado Springs market in a big way.
Jackson Dearborn Partners plans three apartment projects that would add a combined 892 units in downtown, on Colorado Springs’ northeast side and in the unincorporated Cimarron Hills area of El Paso County, according to proposals it’s submitted to city and county officials.
The company would join several out-of-state apartment developers who have invested in Colorado Springs in recent years, saying they were attracted, in general, by the city’s desirability as a place to live.
Jackson Dearborn’s website, along with plans submitted by the company to the city and county, show: