Toys R Us is closed, but that won't stop the kids' store from becoming a playground for children and adults.

Urban Air Adventure Park, a national franchise that will be owned and operated by Abby and Scott Hussey, is expected to open this summer at Front Range Village, 4250 Corbett Drive, northwest of the Harmony Road and Ziegler Road intersection.

The 65,000-square-foot adventure park will include wall-to-wall trampoline areas, bumper cars, dodgeball courts, a stunt airbag, slam dunk tracks, a runway tumble track, a tubes indoor playground, The Urban Warrior Course and Warrior Battle Beam. It will be one of only three Urban Air sites in the country with go-karts, Scott Hussey said.

It will also be home to the Urban Air Adventure Hub, which includes adventure park attractions such as an indoor ropes course and the Urban Air Sky Rider Indoor Coaster. And if all that activity works up an appetite, there's the Urban Cafe.

Hussey said they are investing about $4.2 million in attractions and renovations to the retail space that will include a mezzanine and eight rooms for birthday parties.

"We are excited to bring an indoor adventure park to Northern Colorado," Hussey said. "There's nothing in Northern Colorado that does what we do."

Toys R Us, which was among the first anchor stores to open at Front Range Village in 2008, filed for bankruptcy in 2017 and closed all 700 stores last year.

What's at the old Sports Authority

Toys R Us was the second big-box store at Front Range Village to file for bankruptcy.

Sports Authority closed in 2016 after filing for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. Front Range Village owner RPT Realty (formerly Ramco-Gershenson Properties) cut that space in two, with the north side occupied by 2nd & Charles, which opened in November.

The store, the fourth in Colorado, buys and sells books, CDs, DVDs, video games, game systems, comics, iPads, iPods, e-readers, vinyl records and audio books. Hours are 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Sundays through Thursdays and 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays.

"We continue to have discussion with other retailers about filling the other half of it," said Matthew Chudoba, manager of corporate branding for RPT Realty.