
Another slice shop is sliding onto South Broadway. Slice House by Tony Gemignani is planning a central Denver outpost near the intersection of Sixth Avenue and Broadway, with franchisee Jamey Cutter targeting a fourth-quarter opening at 555 N. Broadway after a roughly $750,000 build-out. The fast-casual counter is set to serve slices in New York, Detroit, Sicilian, and grandma styles, along with whole pies, pastas, wings and salads. Cutter, who opened a Boulder Slice House earlier this year, holds a multi-unit agreement to grow the brand around the Front Range.
Details on the address, timing and financing have been laid out in local coverage. As reported by BusinessDen, Cutter and his wife are franchising Denver’s first Slice House and are pursuing Small Business Administration loans to help support the rollout.
What you'll find on the menu
If you like having options, this menu leans hard into variety. According to Slice House, Colorado is listed among the brand’s market pages, and the concept highlights New York, Grandma, Sicilian, and Detroit-style pizzas, rounded out with salads, pastas, and wings.
Franchise plans for Denver and beyond
Cutter’s franchise agreement covers seven Colorado locations, and he told BusinessDen he expects to place two or three of those in the Denver area, with the Broadway address picked for its visibility, parking, and quick access to Speer Boulevard and I-25. The outlet reports the build-out is slated to wrap later this year and that a basic cheese slice is expected to cost about $6 to $8. Axios Boulder also notes that Cutter opened a Slice House in Boulder in January, and that other franchisees have already pushed the brand into Longmont and Loveland.
Gemignani's reach and local ties
Tony Gemignani made his name in San Francisco, and industry coverage traces the Slice House concept back to around 2010. Over the years, he has trained and mentored Colorado pizzaiolos, including alumni who later opened spots such as Audrey Jane’s in Boulder and Blue Pan in Denver, a history Gemignani has detailed on his own site and in profiles of the brand.
The Broadway shop will plug into a growing Colorado cluster that Slice House lists on its site, and Cutter says the concept is built to perform well just outside the tightest downtown core, where easier parking and steady neighborhood traffic can help sustain takeout and dinner business. We will be watching permitting and build-out progress as the project moves toward its anticipated Q4 opening.









