![]() What’s spurring all this is a combination of new arrivals and industries. “That will be a brewery that will be a food hall,” she says, gesturing enthusiastically through the window of her Tesla as we weave between building sites. She takes monocle around the Granary and Post districts, enclaves of worn-out mills and the nearest thing to a seedy side of town. “One of the first things we did was buy that building and take down that sign.” Winkler’s firm, Q Factor, is developing almost 15 hectares of Salt Lake into a mix of offices, retail, residential and hospitality. “When I moved here four years ago, there was a big ‘guns and gold’ sign at the entrance to the city,” says Ellen Winkler, a Wyoming export. Pressing up against the silver-streaked peaks of the Wasatch Range, part of the Rocky Mountains, this is one of the fastest-growing – and most surprising – business hubs in the US. ![]() They’ll also say that, just like the surf for Californians, every ceo in Salt Lake likes to get an hour in on the slopes before work. Spend a bit of time in Salt Lake City and you’ll soon hear people say that this is the new Denver – a reference to the rapidly growing Coloradan capital. By Christopher Lord Photography Adam Amengual
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