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Littleton authority approves entertainment liquor license for Albatross Golf Lounge

October 09, 2025 | Littleton City, Arapahoe County, Colorado


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Littleton authority approves entertainment liquor license for Albatross Golf Lounge
The Littleton Local Licensing Authority voted 5–0 to approve an entertainment liquor license for ALRM LLC d/b/a Albatross Golf Lounge at 240 Village Park Drive, Suite 110, Littleton.

Applicant Austin Munoz told the commission the business is “fundamentally a golf simulator.” Carol Johnson of Liquor Pros, the third‑party petitioning firm, reported petitioning results: “We made 61 attempts at businesses and 219 for residents for a total of 280, attempts. From that, we obtained 110 signatures. We had 40 from businesses, all 40 were in support, and we had 70 from the residents, 69 were in support, and 1 was on opposition. That 1 gave no reason for the opposition.”

Commissioners asked operational questions. Munoz said the site will include two indoor golf simulators, a bar with roughly nine seats, additional seating and two single‑occupancy restrooms. He said patrons can book private simulator sessions for up to eight people, “but, obviously, only 1 person can be hitting at a time,” and that there will be a bartender or two on duty during operating hours. He said he will not serve prepared food but will offer prepackaged snacks to meet the entertainment‑license food requirement.

Munoz described training plans for staff: he said he and hired bartenders will complete online courses and the TIPS certification before opening. He said staff will be over 21 and that minors may use simulators but “there's gonna be no no, alcohol,” and staff would enforce that policy. He estimated bar seating at nine to ten and said maximum occupancy is listed as 65 in building materials; he expects to open in early 2026, possibly January, pending construction and engineering issues.

The commission’s approval was made “subject to approval by the Colorado Liquor Enforcement Division and based upon the reasonable requirements of the neighborhood, the desires of the adult inhabitants as evidenced by petition, remonstrances, or otherwise, and all other reasonable restrictions that are or may be placed upon the neighborhood by the local licensing commission,” language read into the motion. The motion was moved and seconded; the vote was 5–0.

Conditions noted in the record include compliance with state review, staff verification of operational details at final licensing, and completion of TIPS or equivalent alcohol‑service training before opening.

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Scribe from Workplace AI
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