Business & Tech
Gymboree Gift Cards: Redemption Deadline Looms In Colorado
After the Gymboree Group filed for bankruptcy protection, you don't have much time to redeem gift cards in Colorado.

LITTLETON, CO – If you have Gymboree gift cards, you only have a few days left to use them at the children’s clothing retailer’s Gymboree and Crazy 8 stores in Colorado. The parent company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy last month and is in the process of closing all but its upscale Janie and Jack stores.
The deadline to redeem the Gymboree and Crazy 8 gift cards is Saturday, Feb. 16. The deadline to return merchandise was Friday, Feb. 1. The stores are offering deep discounts, so now is a good time to go shopping.
In our state, stores are located at:
Find out what's happening in Littletonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Gymboree
- Colorado Mills: 14500 W. Colfax Ave., Space #246 Lakewood, CO 80401
- Park Meadows: 8405 Park Meadows Center Dr., Suite 1060 Littleton, CO 80124
- Southlands Town Center 6150 South Main Street, Ste. #I-107 Aurora, CO 80016
- Outlets at Castle Rock 5050 Factory Shops Blvd., Ste. # 660 Castle Rock, CO 80108
- Outlets at Loveland 5741 McWhinney Blvd, Space A330 Loveland, CO 80538
Crazy 8
Find out what's happening in Littletonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
- The Orchard Town Center: 14644 Orchard Pkwy #900, Westminster, CO 80023
- Town Center At Aurora: 14200 E Alameda Ave Suite 1048A, Aurora, CO 80012
- Colorado Mills: 14500 W. Colfax Ave., Lakewood, CO 80401
In its bankruptcy filing, the Gymboree Group said it was seeking a buyer for its Janie and Jack stores.Gymboree Play & Music, which offers developmental play, music and art classes for young children and separated from the Gymboree Group in 2016 to become a standalone company, isn’t affected by the bankruptcy filing.
In the filing, the retailer said that though it would honor the gift cards, it was halting its GymBucks and Gymboree Rewards programs.
Though “highly disappointed” that it must close its Gymboree and Crazy 8 stores, Gymboree Group CEO Shaz Kahng said in a statement at the time of the bankruptcy filing that “we are focused on using this process to preserve the Janie and Jack business — a strong brand that is poised to grow — by pursuing the sale of the business as a going concern.”
“As we move ahead, we are working to minimize the impact on our employees, customers, vendors and other stakeholders,” he said.
Like many brick-and-mortar stores, Gymboree has struggled to remain afloat against increased online competition.
The company first filed for bankruptcy in July 2017 and closed 350 stores. At the time, the company said in a statement that closing those stores would allow the company to “continue to deliver quality merchandise and superior service to our customers.”
Related: Gymboree Bankruptcy Aims To Save Colorado's Janie And Jack Stores
Related: Gymboree Bankruptcy Will Close Stores In Colorado: Reports
By Patch National Staffer Beth Dalbey.
Photo: Renee Schiavone / Patch
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