Topgolf facility next to I-25 sunk after Timnath says no to tall fences

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A man dressed as a bald eagle stands with a crowd in front of representatives of Topgolf during a public meeting in Timnath on Feb. 13, 2023. Residents in the fast-growing community near Fort Collins are trying to stop the company from building a facility in town, claiming Topgolf's trademark safety nets pose a risk to migratory birds in flight. (Photo by John Aguilar/The Denver Post)
A man dressed as a bald eagle stands with a crowd in front of representatives of Topgolf during a public meeting in Timnath on Feb. 13, 2023. Residents in the fast-growing community near Fort Collins are trying to stop the company from building a facility in town, claiming Topgolf’s trademark safety nets pose a risk to migratory birds in flight. (Photo by John Aguilar/The Denver Post)

Voters in Timnath have boxed Topgolf out of their fast-growing town, voting overwhelmingly Tuesday to ban the type of tall fences the company needs for its high-tech driving range.

By a more than two-to-one margin, voters in this Larimer County town approved in a special election Ballot Issue 1A, which will prohibit fences that exceed 65 feet in height. Topgolf, which has three Colorado locations, erects mesh fences more than 100 feet tall at its facilities to catch balls launched by customers swinging away in an array of hitting bays.

“We are pleased that the citizens of Timnath have spoken and have determined that development in the town of Timnath needs to be aligned with our existing land use codes and the adopted 2020 comprehensive plan,” said Bill Jenkins, who helped lead the campaign against Topgolf.

A sizable group of residents started a campaign against the facility earlier this year, citing the nets at Topgolf as a potential hazard to birds as they move through the Cache la Poudre River National Heritage Area, which runs for 45 miles from the edge of the Roosevelt National Forest in Larimer County to the river’s confluence with the South Platte River near Greeley.

According to an avian risk report published last year, 240 species of resident and migrating birds use the nearby Fossil Creek Reservoir, including bald eagles, great blue herons, ducks, geese, swans and cranes.

Instances of birds flying into and getting hung up in Topgolf’s nets have occurred across the country, including an osprey that died after getting caught in a Topgolf net in Myrtle Beach, S.C. in 2019. Earlier this year, a hawk was rescued after getting tangled at an Orlando Topgolf.

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