View of the Denver downtown with its office buildings

| 2 minute read

MetLife Investment Management Sells 304,000-Square-Foot Denver Office Building

BY Lucian Alixandrescu | Feb 16, 2021

MetLife Investment Management — the asset management branch of Fortune 500 financial services company MetLife — has recently announced the sale of 4600 S. Syracuse, a 304,059-square-foot office space in Denver. The purchase was made by a joint venture between Miller Global Properties and Principal Real Estate Investors and landed MetLife — which, like many other financial and insurance companies, still has a work from home policy in place — $74.3 million. Mesa West Capital provided an acquisition loan totaling $59.3 million for the new owner.

Mark Katz, senior managing director of JLL, represented the seller in the deal, while Eric Tupler and Josh Simon, senior managing directors of MetLife’s Capital Markets team, arranged the acquisition financing.

The property’s class A office space is distributed across 13 floors. According to CommercialEdge data, it was initially built in 1999 on a 10-acre site, and was later sold for $60.8 million in 2001, with renovations completed in 2013. The office tower features 25,000-square-foot floorplates and high ceilings, as well as other recently upgraded amenities, such as a fitness center, a conferencing facility and an atrium. The property also features a 727-space parking garage, with a parking ratio of approximately 4 spots per 1,000 square feet. The occupancy rate stands at 90%, with tenants including Regus, IT company Wolters Kluwer and specialty insurance provider Argo Group.

Situated in the Denver Tech Center in the southeastern part of the Denver metro, the property is located in an area with steady growth, thanks to the tech and communications industries. Plus, the tech hub is connected to the rest of the city through the E, F and R light rail lines, as well as two interstates: I-25 and I-225. The nearby Centennial reliever airport also provides logistical opportunities for companies operating in the area, such as AT&T, Comcast, Boeing, Merrill Lynch and Morgan Stanley, among others.

Lucian is a senior content writer for CommercialCafe, specializing in commercial real estate research and data-driven reporting since 2019. With deep expertise in industrial real estate, office markets, demographics, and economics, he produces comprehensive market studies and insights on national and regional CRE trends. He also reports on adjacent subjects such as population shifts and the job market. His reports have been cited by and featured in The New York Times, Forbes, NBC, Bisnow, The Business Journals, and Yahoo Finance. Lucian holds a background in language and literature studies and brings more than 5 years of previous freelance writing experience to his commercial real estate journalism.

Recent Reports

Locked-In Owners, Mobile Renters: Homeowners Stay Put as Renters Move 3.7x More Across Largest U.S. Cities 
May 7, 2026

Renters became the primary drivers of long-distance mobility across the largest U.S. cities, moving 3.7 times more than owners in 2024, as high mortgage rates and housing costs kept many homeowners in place.

Queens & Manhattan skylines w Queensborough bridge
$4.6M Hudson Yards Maintains Top Spot, Luxury Sales in Malba Set $2.5M Price Record for Queens
April 23, 2026

Despite prices declining, Hudson Yards remained the most expensive NYC neighborhood, but TriBeCa’s growth closed the gap to under $400,000, while Malba set a new historic price record for Queens at $2.5 million, securing the highest ranking ever for the borough at #5.

Brooklyn streetcorner
2026 Q1 Foreclosure Report: Brooklyn Filings Fall Sharply, Bronx & Staten Island Hit New Peaks
April 15, 2026

Behind a deceptively mild citywide downtick, borough foreclosure markets pulled into significantly diverging paths as Brooklyn cases were nearly halved and the Bronx hit a new, record high. Meanwhile, Queens remained unchanged, Staten Island surged back up and Manhattan cooled slowly.