The Story Behind
1334 Gore Trail | Mountain Panoramas Across 5.69 Sun-Drenched Acres
There is a particular kind of land that does not merely accommodate a home — it elevates it. This 5.69-acre homesite in Cordillera, Colorado belongs to that rare category. Oriented due south, the parcel captures maximum sunlight across every season, bathing its open meadow terrain in the kind of clear, high-altitude light that photographers and architects alike spend careers chasing. The result is a canvas that glows from morning to dusk, framed on every horizon by layered, snow-capped mountain ranges that shift in color and shadow throughout the day.
The land itself is uncommonly generous in its topography. Rather than the steep, challenging grades that define much of Colorado's mountain terrain, this parcel sits flat and navigable to build your mountain escape — a quality that grants architects and builders the freedom to orient a residence in virtually many configurations within the 125' x 145' building envelope. Floor plans that might be compromised on a sloped site become fully realizable here. A single-level residence, a multi-wing compound, a home designed around the sweeping views and open to the sky — all are within reach.
Native sagebrush, wild lupine, and golden grasses already establish the palette of the land, providing a naturalistic foreground that will complement rather than compete with considered residential landscaping. In spring and early summer, balsamroot wildflowers blanket the meadow in vivid yellow, a seasonal performance that requires no intervention and no maintenance. The land, in this sense, is already performing.
From a practical standpoint, the groundwork for development has been thoughtfully laid. Water, electric, gas, and high-speed internet connections are available at the site, eliminating the logistical and financial complexity that often accompanies raw land acquisition. A previous soils test provides critical structural data for your engineering team, and a recertified 2020 survey precisely delineates the boundaries of the parcel — documentation that allows an architect and contractor to move directly from schematic design into permitting and construction without the delays typically associated with undeveloped land.
The panoramic exposure is the defining characteristic of this property, and it is not a quality that can be replicated or manufactured after the fact. It is intrinsic to the site's position within the landscape — elevated, open, and sundrenched in every direction. A home built here will wake to mountain views from the east, watch the sun arc across an open southern sky, and close each day with the kind of western sunset that defines the Colorado high-country experience. Whatever architectural language your design team chooses within the Cordillera guidelines — whether the warm stone and dark timber vernacular of mountain modernism or a more mountain traditional expression — the views will remain the constant, irreplaceable anchor of the home. This is not simply a place to build. It is a position from which to live.
Cordillera is one of the Eagle Valley's most established and respected private mountain communities, occupying a dramatic ridgeline above the town of Edwards, Colorado, roughly 30 miles west of Vail. Developed across thousands of acres of high-desert terrain at elevations approaching 9,000 feet, the community was conceived as a place where architecture, recreation, and landscape exist in deliberate harmony. Over the decades since its founding, Cordillera has attracted discerning homeowners drawn to its combination of genuine wilderness access, curated amenities, and a sense of remove from the valley floor that few communities in the region can match.
The community is organized around several distinct neighborhoods, each with its own character and relationship to the surrounding terrain, yet all sharing access to the same exceptional infrastructure. The Summit Athletic Facility serves as a social and recreational anchor for residents, offering a fully equipped weight room with panoramic mountain views, a swimming pool, hot tub, fitness classes, and pickleball courts — amenities that reflect the active, health-conscious lifestyle that defines Cordillera's culture. The Summit Clubhouse provides a more contemplative counterpoint, with a restaurant and an adjacent golf course that winds through the natural landscape with the kind of thoughtful design that respects rather than overwhelms its setting.
For those whose primary relationship with the outdoors is on foot or on a bicycle, Cordillera's trail network is among its most compelling features. The Big Park trailhead, accessible by a short walk from this particular parcel, connects residents to miles of maintained hiking and mountain biking terrain that traverse the community's expansive open space. The Cordillera Trailhead provides additional access points, ensuring that the landscape surrounding the community is not merely a backdrop but an active, daily amenity. In winter, the same trails that carry hikers in summer become quiet corridors for snowshoeing and cross-country exploration, while Vail and Beaver Creek — two of North America's most celebrated ski resorts — sit within a short drive down the valley.
Edwards, the nearest town center, has matured into a genuine local hub with a strong independent retail and dining scene, including the Riverwalk at Edwards, which lines the Eagle River with restaurants, shops, and services that reflect the sophistication of the broader valley community. Avon and Beaver Creek are similarly close, offering additional dining, cultural programming through the Vilar Performing Arts Center, and the full suite of services expected by an international resort community.
The Eagle River corridor itself is a designated Gold Medal fishery — one of Colorado's finest — attracting fly fishing enthusiasts from across the country and providing a tangible connection to the natural systems that define the region. The surrounding White River National Forest encompasses millions of acres of protected wilderness, ensuring that the open character of the landscape visible from this homesite will endure.
To live in Cordillera is to inhabit a community that takes its relationship with the land seriously — one where the infrastructure supports an active, engaged life without diminishing the qualities of wilderness and quiet that make the Eagle Valley worth calling home.
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