The Story Behind
Seventeen Acres of Solitude Above the Denver Skyline
There is a particular kind of home that announces its intentions before you have crossed the threshold. This is one of them. The flagstone entry sets the tone — grounded, deliberate, unhurried — and the exposed log walls that rise to meet vaulted wood-paneled ceilings confirm that everything here was built with a specific feeling in mind. Not the performative rusticity of a weekend cabin, but the full-throated authenticity of a home conceived to exist in complete harmony with its landscape.
The great room is the heart of it. A massive moss rock fireplace commands the space with a scale and raw materiality that draws the eye immediately, before the expansive windows redirect your attention outward to the Denver skyline and the mountain range beyond. The effect is cinematic — interior warmth framed against an exterior of extraordinary scope. This is a room that functions beautifully at any hour, shifting from the amber glow of a winter fire to the blue-hour glitter of city lights spread across the horizon.
The home was designed for gathering. Custom built-in bars in both the living room and the family room speak to an owner who understood that the best entertaining spaces are built in, not arranged. The wood-vaulted dining room frames scenic forest views and provides a quieter, more intimate counterpoint to the larger social rooms. The newly updated gourmet kitchen — outfitted with professional-grade appliances and flowing directly into a charming breakfast nook — balances the home's grander entertaining ambitions with the rhythms of daily life. Skylights and large windows ensure the kitchen reads as bright and connected to the landscape even during Colorado's longer winter days.
The primary bedroom carries the same exposed log character found throughout, grounded by a stone fireplace and generous windows that frame the mountains rather than compete with them. The renovated primary bathroom brings a current sensibility to the lodge aesthetic — a dual vanity with custom wood cabinetry, a soaking tub, a walk-in shower finished in elegant vertical tile, and brushed gold fixtures that feel precise without being cold. A well-appointed walk-in closet completes the suite.
Below grade, the home reveals another dimension. The entertainment basement is a serious room — a full-size pool table under a statement pendant light, a custom wet bar with high-top seating, a dedicated media area, and a home office nook. It is a space that functions independently of the main living areas, offering a destination within the home itself.
For extended family or long-term guests, a fully self-contained mother-in-law suite provides its own kitchen, bathroom, and living area — complete autonomy within the property without sacrificing proximity. A sauna adds a wellness dimension that feels entirely appropriate given the elevation and the climate.
Outside, multiple decks and stone patios — several anchored by built-in fire pits and furnished with rocking chairs — extend the living area into the landscape. The two-stall barn and corral are thoughtfully sited on the acreage, making the property genuinely viable for equestrian use. Every exterior space is oriented toward the view, because on seventeen acres above Denver, the view is always the point.
The foothills west of Denver occupy a particular geographic and cultural position that few regions in the American West can replicate. This is the edge of the Front Range — the dramatic escarpment where the Great Plains give way to the Rocky Mountains — and it has drawn people seeking both the energy of a major city and the restorative power of mountain land for well over a century. The balance this corridor strikes between accessibility and genuine wilderness is, in real estate terms, almost impossible to manufacture. It simply exists here, as a product of geography.
The greater Jefferson County foothills community, within which this property sits, encompasses some of the most sought-after residential land along the entire Front Range. The area is characterized by large-parcel properties, equestrian estates, and custom homes set into terrain that changes dramatically with the seasons — golden aspens in autumn, snow-draped ponderosa pines in winter, wildflower-strewn meadows in spring and summer. The HOA open space and adjacent acreage that buffer this property — approximately 800 acres in total — are not an anomaly here but rather a reflection of the land-use philosophy that defines the region: that the landscape itself is the amenity, and that protecting it is a shared commitment.
Thirty minutes to downtown Denver places this property within easy reach of one of the most economically dynamic and culturally vibrant cities in the Mountain West. Denver's Union Station district, the Denver Art Museum, the performing arts complex, and a restaurant scene that has earned national recognition are all within comfortable driving distance. The city's international airport, Denver International, provides direct connections to major domestic and international destinations — an important consideration for buyers who travel frequently for business or leisure.
For everyday needs, the fifteen-minute drive to nearby shopping and dining ensures that the seclusion of the property never becomes inconvenience. The communities along the US-285 and C-470 corridors offer grocery stores, specialty retailers, and a range of dining options that serve the foothills residential community without requiring a trip into the city.
Outdoor recreation in this part of Colorado is genuinely extraordinary. Jefferson County Open Space manages thousands of acres of parkland throughout the foothills, with extensive trail systems for hiking, mountain biking, and equestrian use. Chatfield State Park, Red Rocks Park and Amphitheatre — one of the most celebrated outdoor concert venues in the world — and Roxborough State Park are all within a reasonable drive. World-class ski resorts, including Breckenridge, Keystone, and Arapahoe Basin, are accessible in roughly ninety minutes via I-70, placing this property within the orbit of some of the finest skiing in North America.
What the foothills offer, ultimately, is a way of living that is difficult to sustain anywhere else at this latitude: the intellectual and cultural resources of a major metropolitan area, held in productive tension with landscapes that demand nothing of you except presence. This property, positioned on its seventeen acres with the city lights visible from every deck and the mountains rising behind it, embodies that balance completely.
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Curated Content • Presented by Mark & Melissa Baumann





















































