Phillips Foundation Auto & Storage Center

Aurora, United States

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Description

Specialties

Phillips Storage facility is only 10 minutes from DIA. Our 15 acre Gated and Secured facility has indoor and outdoor storage options for all size vehicles! A keypad allows for 24 hour access to your vehicle. Our main 15,000 sq. ft. building houses two heated application/​spray booths. A 60-​foot booth, and a 20-​foot booth to refinish cars, trucks, commercial vehicles, semi’s, RV’s and Buses. Both units are heated so poor weather installations are a breeze. We accept personal repairs, hail damage, insurance claims, city and government accounts, and fleet repairs. We also offer collision repair, refinishing, frame repair, and media blasting services for all years, makes, and models. We specialize in fleet vehicle restoration but can work on anything from ATM machines to Zambonis!

History

Established in 2010.

Mr. Chuck Phillips has been in business around the Denver area for over 40 years. He got his start in auto body at a young age. Through many different ventures including auto wrecking/​repair, construction, community development, property management, he has become a recognized entrepreneur and philanthropist in Colorado. For more information on the Phillips Foundation and it’s projects please look us up online!

Meet the Business Owner

Chuck P.

Business Owner

The Phillips Foundation was Established in 1999. From the beginning, we have been dedicated to rebuilding the community with projects such as the Renovation of the Historic Wyatt School House, which now houses the Wyatt Edison Charter School housing over 600 students. The Phillips Family Trust, which owns the building, leases the property to Wyatt-​Edison Charter School, for only one dollar a year. As if to make the deal more sweet, the duration of their lease is 40 years!

Charles «Chuck» Phillips is an entrepreneur and has a long history of Philanthropy in the state of Colorado. In 1953, at the age of seventeen, Chuck decided to venture out of his small town of Okmulgee, Oklahoma and move to Denver to find work. Chuck set off to explore the world with $ 3.00 and a bus ticket, and with only $ 0.30 in his pocket, Chuck stepped off the bus at Colfax and York Street In the early fifties. (Full biography available online)