metro denver real estate littleton co real estate highlands ranch real estate
 
Visit Colorado
 
Cities & Communities
    Arapahoe County
    Cities
    Neighborhoods
    Douglas County
    Cities
    Neighborhoods
    Jefferson County
    Cities
    Neighborhoods
    Adams County
    Cities
    Neighborhoods
    Denver County
    Cities
    Neighborhoods
    Elbert County
    Cities
    Neighborhoods
 
Colorado Resort Areas
 
Real Estate Articles
    Buyers
    Sellers
    New Homes
    Loans & Mortgages
    Relocating
 
Events
 
News
 
Rentals
 
Resource Articles
 
Schools
 
Sports

Denver County
Latest Articles
Colorado Real Estate in Denver County
Denver CO Thriving Real Estate
Upscale Cherry Creek Denver CO Real Estate


Search



neighborhoods, cities

Cities & Communities : Denver County

 


Colorado Real Estate in Denver County
By Paragon Real Estate Group


Email this article
 Printer friendly page

Real estate in Denver County, Colorado features a unique governance—a consolidated city and county.  Reaching over 150 square miles and nesting 567,000 residents of Denver CO homes, the community is located in the South Platte River Valley on the High Plains along the eastern edge of the Front Range.  Start your Denver CO real estate search near the downtown communities of Lowry Field real estate or a little further towards the foothills in Arvada real estate or Boulder.  Then ask about Colorado mortgages for a vacation home in Copper Mountain or Silverthorne so your family blossoms on the slopes of the Rocky Mountains. 

Denver is surrounded by Adams County to the north and east, Arapahoe County to the east and south, and Jefferson County to the west.  Inside Denver County real estate, buyers will find a wide variety of homes--everything from lofts and tall skyscrapers to historic Victorian brick homes to modern suburban developments.   Seventy-nine neighborhoods have been named by planners and developers, many served by one of 200 small parks or the 314-acre City Park.  Residents enjoy 29 recreation centers, one reason that residents are continually rated as "fittest" and "healthiest". 

The city and county also owns 14,000 acres of mountain parks.  Red Rocks Park and the area around Red Rocks Amphitheatre, and Winter Park Resort ski area 67 miles west of downtown are two of these important gathering places for residents.  From the steps of the State Capitol Building downtown, the elevation is 5, 280 feet above sea level--thus the nickname, the Mile High City.  For centuries, travelers camped on the banks of the South Platte River as well as Cherry Creek after they disembarked from canoes and barges. 

Today, the community is accessible via railroad and many roadways, especially Interstates 25 and 70.  With its central location in the United States, the county is a natural transportation hub for storage and distribution of goods and services to the Mountain States.  Denver International Airport to the north of downtown allows multi-national commerce to flourish along with a lucrative convention business recently increased by the expansion of the Convention Center.  A strong mass transportation system service the entire metro area with over a thousand RTD buses, a light rail system called FasTracks, Amtrak, a Ski Train, and much more.  The historic Union Station is still a hub of activity.

The location has also drawn a considerable government presence, including branches of federal agencies, defense and space projects, and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory.  Proximity to the mineral-rich Rocky Mountains magnetized miners from the gold and silver booms as well as mining and energy companies to settle down in the city.  With the dawn of telecommunications, the city benefits from a location along the  105th meridian enables it to be the largest U.S. city to be able to offer a one-bounce, real-time satellite uplink to six continents during the same business day.  The area is served by a variety of media outlets for print, radio, television, and the Internet.

The 73,000 students are served by the Denver Public Schools, a system that opened in 1859 in a log cabin.  Many colleges and universities, including private institutions of higher education are situated here.  The median household income is approximately $40,000 and the median age is 33.  The community is set in the Mountain Time Zone, uses a variety of zip codes from 80012 to 80299, area codes of 303 and 720, an FIPS code of 08-20000, and a GNIS feature ID of 0201738.


Web Site Design © 2008 IMC, Articles by eColoradoRealEstate.com

Top of Page


relocation