The Story Behind
A Timeless Estate Where Family Life Finds Its Finest Form
There is a particular quality that separates a well-appointed house from a home that has been genuinely lived in and loved — and 5635 S Cherry Court possesses that quality in abundance. Set on a private cul-de-sac within The Preserve, this multi-gabled brick estate announces itself with quiet confidence: a sweeping concrete driveway, a columned arched entryway, and a facade of warm brick and stucco framed by mature evergreens that have grown into the kind of sentinels money cannot easily buy.
Step inside and the foyer establishes the architectural grammar of the entire home. A curved staircase with intricate wrought-iron balusters rises above hardwood floors, while formal living and dining rooms open to either side, their front-facing windows drawing in the golden light of Colorado mornings. These are rooms that understand occasion — spaces that rise to a dinner party without making an ordinary Tuesday feel formal.
The kitchen is the undisputed heart of this residence, and it earns that designation without apology. Remodeled with the considered hand of someone who actually cooks, it offers dark-stained custom cabinetry, a granite-topped island with integrated cooktop, a farmhouse sink, double ovens, two dishwashers, and a walk-in pantry — all opening through French doors to the backyard. The finishes carry the warmth of a Napa estate kitchen: substantial, sensory, and deeply satisfying to inhabit. The adjacent breakfast nook, suffused with natural light, is precisely the sort of room a family colonizes and never quite leaves.
On the main floor, a proper study commands its own wing, divided by a graceful archway into a working desk space and a library alcove lined with custom built-in bookshelves. It is a genuinely rare room — the kind that disappears from new construction — and its French doors extend an invitation to the backyard that is difficult to decline.
Upstairs, the primary suite reads as a private retreat within the home. A curved bay window frames the backyard canopy, while a white fireplace and dedicated seating area establish an unhurried pace. The brand-new en suite is a study in considered luxury: a freestanding soaking tub positioned beneath a generous window, a glass-enclosed walk-in shower with stone tile accents, a double vanity with white quartz countertops and gold-toned fixtures, and a custom walk-in closet that addresses the practical with the same care given to the beautiful. Four additional upper-level bedrooms — each freshly painted with new flooring and generous closets, two with their own en suite baths — ensure that no occupant of this home negotiates for space or privacy.
The basement resolves the question of where everyone goes when the house is full. A pool table anchors one end; a built-in bar with counter seating provides its natural companion. A media lounge with integrated cabinetry, a dedicated fitness room, two additional bedrooms, and a flex space for games or creative pursuits complete a lower level that functions as a self-contained world. Outside, the stone patio, raised deck, pergola, and hot tub compose a backyard that earns the word sanctuary — shaded by blue spruces, private, and calibrated for every season Colorado offers.
Greenwood Village occupies a singular position in the Denver metropolitan landscape — an incorporated city of roughly 16,000 residents that has maintained its character as one of the Front Range's most desirable addresses for decades. Situated in Arapahoe County along the southern edge of the Denver Tech Center corridor, it is a community defined by the deliberate preservation of open space, mature tree canopy, and residential quality that larger municipalities rarely sustain at scale.
The Preserve, where this estate is located, is among Greenwood Village's most established and sought-after neighborhoods. Developed on what was once the rural fringe of the city, the community takes its name seriously: generous lot sizes, strict architectural standards, and a landscape of mature trees that have been allowed to grow into genuine canopy give the neighborhood a settled, unhurried atmosphere that newer developments spend decades attempting to replicate. Cul-de-sac streets reduce through traffic to near zero, and the community's amenities — including a swimming pool, tennis courts, and basketball facilities — reinforce a sense of shared investment in the quality of daily life.
Direct access to the High Line Canal Trail is among the neighborhood's most prized assets. The trail, which runs approximately 71 miles through the Denver metropolitan area, follows the path of an 1883 irrigation canal and has been preserved as a recreational corridor of genuine beauty. Walking, running, and cycling along its tree-lined path offers a connection to the region's natural and historical character that is increasingly rare in the suburban Front Range.
The property falls within the Littleton Public Schools district, consistently recognized as one of the highest-performing school districts in Colorado. The district's combination of academic rigor, arts programming, and athletic opportunity has made it a primary driver of residential demand in the area for generations.
The surrounding community infrastructure is equally compelling for daily life. The Streets at SouthGlenn, located minutes away, provides a walkable retail and dining environment anchored by a mix of national brands and independent restaurateurs. Cherry Hills Village and Englewood's medical corridor are both within easy reach, as is the Denver Tech Center — one of the region's primary employment hubs — making the commute calculus unusually favorable for a neighborhood that feels this removed from commercial density.
Interstate 25 access connects residents to downtown Denver in under twenty minutes under normal conditions, while the light rail's Arapahoe at Village Center station, located nearby, provides a car-optional route to Union Station and the broader regional rail network.
Beyond infrastructure, Greenwood Village carries a quality of life that is felt rather than simply listed. The city maintains its own parks system, invests in trail connectivity, and has historically resisted the density pressures that have reshaped neighboring communities. For a family seeking the full breadth of Denver metropolitan amenities without surrendering the space, privacy, and neighborhood coherence that define genuine residential quality, The Preserve in Greenwood Village represents one of the most persuasive answers the region offers.
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