Lone Tree
Is Lone Tree a Good Place to Live: Lone Tree is a higher-end suburb of Denver, 20 miles south of downtown and 10 miles south of the Denver Tech Center. Sky Ridge Medical Center, Charles Schwab, and Kiewit are major employers in Lone Tree. The median home price is over $1M, though that will get buyers a large home over 4000 SF. Major attractions include Park Meadows Mall (which I would argue is nicest mall in metro Denver outside of Cherry Creek Shopping Center/Cherry Creek North), Lone Tree Golf Club and Hotel, Bluffs Regional Park, trail system, Lone Tree Rec Center, light rail, Sky Ridge Medical Center, and Douglas County School District.
Lone Tree: 217 listings. 152 houses. $330K to $3.095M. $1.164M (median house price) gets you 4,568 SF, 4 bed, 4 bath residence built in 1999 (2022 data).
The Lay of the Land: Lone Tree sits at the intersection of I-25 and 470. On the northern boundary is Park Meadows mall and other retail uses. The western side of I-25 is a full-fledged community whereas the eastern side is a blank slate with development planned for the next 10+ years. Lincoln Ave and Yosemite serve as reasonably good dividers for the developed part of Lone Tree - Northwest corner is highlighted by Lone Tree Golf Course. Northeast quadrant is highlighted by gated community of $1M+ homes known as Heritage Hills. Southwest quadrant has its own gated community situated around multiple fairways of Lone Tree Golf Course as well as hundreds of acres of open space known as Bluffs Regional Park. The southeast quadrant of Lincoln and Yosemite includes more a mixed-use vibe with reasonable pedestrian and biker friendly access to Charles Schwab, Sky Ridge Medical, Lone Tree Arts Center, Lone Tree Rec Center, Target, Douglas County Library, Monk & Mongoose Coffee, Starbucks, Snooze AM Eatery, Prairie Sky Park, etc. Apartments and condo/townhome units are spread throughout the Lone Tree city limits. While different people want different things in a home, most will find a lot of things to like about Lone Tree.
Interested in More Information: Talk with someone that has researched metro Denver ad nauseam - market stats, newspapers, city planning documents, zoning possibilities, upside potential, concerns, schools, crime, new developments, neighborhood websites, one area vs another, etc. Chat with Matt - send me a text at 303-524-2086 and we’ll schedule a time to talk. Or, if it’s easier, send an email to MatthewJamesLong@GMail.com.