The Story Behind
A Rare Single-Level Sanctuary Above the Gore Range
There are renovations, and then there are reinventions. This residence at Fall Ridge belongs firmly in the latter category. Originally a commercial office suite, the space was stripped entirely to the studs in 2022 and rebuilt with the singular intention of creating something the building had never seen before: a true single-level home of scale, sophistication, and seamless mountain-modern design.
The result is 2,517 square feet that flows without interruption — a rarity in mountain condominium living, where split-level layouts and segmented floor plans are the norm. Entry begins with intention. A built-in mudroom greets you with a custom grey bench and overhead cubby storage — a practical, architecturally considered threshold that immediately signals the thoughtfulness embedded throughout. From there, luxury vinyl plank flooring carries the eye down a wide, light-filled corridor and into a great room that commands attention.
Large windows frame the Gore Range directly, and a gas fireplace anchors the living area with warmth and quiet architectural authority. The kitchen is the social heart of the residence: white cabinetry with dark grey accents, quartz countertops, a subway tile backsplash, stainless steel appliances, and a generous island fitted with bold red bar seating that adds a spirited pop of personality against the neutral palette. The kitchen opens without partition into the dining area and living space — one continuous, cohesive volume designed for gathering.
The primary suite is a considered retreat. Plush carpeting, a glass door to the outdoors, and an en-suite finished with a quartz vanity, a glass-enclosed walk-in shower featuring dark hexagonal tile flooring and a recessed niche, and a deep soaking tub positioned beneath a natural light window together compose a space that is equal parts spa and sanctuary. Three additional guest bedrooms each offer their own en-suite bath, ensuring that privacy is never compromised regardless of how the home is configured or occupied.
A full-sized laundry room — not a closet, a room — adds a layer of livability that distinguishes this residence from the typical mountain pied-à-terre. The flexible den, currently arranged as both a gym and a home office, accommodates the demands of modern work and wellness without sacrificing elegance.
Outside, the L-shaped private patio spans nearly 900 square feet — a figure that rivals the outdoor terraces of standalone mountain homes. Concrete flooring, dark metal railings, and unobstructed Gore Range views define a space that is as suited to a dinner party under the stars as it is to a quiet morning with coffee and alpenglow. A second private deck with direct stair access to grade extends the connection to the landscape further still, with easy access for walks along the adjacent road.
One of only a handful of units in Fall Ridge with air conditioning, the residence offers a level of year-round comfort that is genuinely uncommon in this price range and setting. This is not a renovation — it is a ground-up vision, executed with precision and lived-in warmth.
Vail, Colorado occupies a singular position in the American mountain landscape — not merely as a world-class ski destination, but as a fully realized, four-season community with a depth of culture, recreation, and natural grandeur that few alpine towns can match. Situated in the White River National Forest along Gore Creek in Eagle County, Vail was founded in 1962 by Pete Seibert and Earl Eaton, who recognized the extraordinary potential of the terrain above what was then a quiet ranching valley along U.S. Highway 6. In the decades since, Vail has grown into one of the most recognized resort communities in the world — while retaining an intimacy and pedestrian character that distinguishes it from larger mountain metros.
Fall Ridge sits in East Vail, a quieter, more residential corridor of the valley that offers genuine connection to the natural environment without sacrificing access to the amenities that define Vail living. The Vail Golf Course — a championship 18-hole layout whose fairways unspool along Gore Creek with the Gore Range as a constant backdrop — is steps from the front door, offering one of the most visually dramatic rounds of golf available anywhere in the Colorado Rockies. The course, open seasonally, is a community anchor that draws residents and visitors alike through the warmer months.
For those drawn to the mountain itself, Vail Mountain remains one of the largest ski resorts in North America, with over 5,300 acres of skiable terrain spanning seven back bowls and multiple front-side pod areas. The legendary Back Bowls — some of the most celebrated open-bowl skiing on the continent — are accessible from the mountain's upper lifts, and the resort's infrastructure, snowmaking capacity, and consistent snowfall create conditions that justify Vail's long-standing global reputation. The free Town of Vail bus system, accessible steps from Fall Ridge, connects East Vail directly to the ski mountain, Vail Village, and Lionshead without the need for a car.
Vail Village itself, styled after European alpine villages with pedestrian-only cobblestone promenades, wooden balconies, and flower-draped storefronts, offers a concentration of dining, retail, and après culture that operates year-round. Restaurants ranging from casual mountain fare to celebrated fine dining line the village core, while boutiques, galleries, and outfitters fill the walkable blocks between. In summer, the Gerald R. Ford Amphitheater — named for the former president who made Vail his longtime home — hosts the Bravo! Vail music festival and the Colorado Ballet, drawing world-class performers to an open-air venue framed by the Gore Range.
The surrounding landscape offers hiking, mountain biking, fly fishing along Gore Creek, and wildflower meadows that bloom through July and August with a brilliance that rivals the ski season in spectacle. Gore Creek Trail, accessible from the neighborhood, winds through riparian corridors and aspen groves that turn gold each September in one of Colorado's most celebrated autumn displays.
This is a place that rewards presence in every season — and this residence was built to meet each one with equal grace.
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