The Story Behind
A Mountain-Top Sanctuary Where French Elegance Meets Alpine Grandeur
There are mountain homes, and then there is 3712 Daybreak Ridge — a residence that does not simply occupy its landscape but becomes part of it. Perched at one of the uppermost elevations within Bachelor Gulch Village, this estate was conceived as something far more ambitious than a ski retreat. It is a monument to craft, a study in architectural restraint and richness, and a deeply personal vision of what luxury at altitude can truly mean.
RMT Architects approached the design with a governing philosophy rooted in 17th-century French mountain vernacular — a tradition that prizes permanence, proportion, and the honest use of natural materials. The result is a structure that feels simultaneously ancient and alive. More than 600 tons of stone were sourced and placed by hand, shaping the exterior walls, chimneys, archways, and terraces that define the home's identity. The complex roofline — a composition of steeply pitched gables, timber framing, and stone-clad dormers — anchors the residence into the alpine forest with an authority that few mountain homes achieve.
The arrival sequence sets an immediate tone. A heavy timber-framed portico leads through a fortress-like stone entryway, its curved walls and custom-built gear storage cubbies offering both theater and function. From here, vaulted ceilings with exposed dark timber beams open across the principal living spaces, where wide-plank wood flooring, stone-clad chimney breasts, and iron chandelier work establish a vocabulary of deliberate, grounded luxury.
The kitchen is a working room in the truest sense — anchored by a thick butcher-block island, professional-grade range, and a built-in stone-clad pizza oven framed within a curved, decoratively strapped wall that would not look out of place in a centuries-old Savoyard farmhouse. Adjacent, a custom bar with geometric tilework and dark timber overhead beams transitions naturally into the wine cellar, where arched stonework and bespoke wooden racking create an intimate, old-world atmosphere suited to serious collecting.
The primary suite is unhurried and considered. A stone fireplace anchors the bedroom, while the spa bathroom — with its freestanding soaking tub positioned before a wall of windows overlooking snow-covered pines and a decorative hanging lantern casting warm light across exposed ceiling beams — reads more like a private retreat than a domestic room. A wood-paneled sauna, private gym, and dedicated massage treatment room complete a wellness suite that rivals the finest alpine spas.
Outside, a stone-lined hot tub sits flush with the flagstone patio beneath the forest canopy, accompanied by stone steps ascending into the hillside and framed by deep snow banks — a setting of remarkable serenity. Multiple decks extend the living spaces outward, each one oriented to capture the Gore Range views that define life at this elevation.
Every detail — the ironwork sconces, the carved stone archways, the barrel-vaulted game room, the ornate chandeliers — speaks to a project built without compromise, by craftspeople working at the very top of their discipline. 3712 Daybreak Ridge is, in the most literal sense, a singular achievement.
Bachelor Gulch occupies a particular position within the Vail Valley — one defined not merely by geography, but by a specific and carefully maintained standard of alpine living. Situated within the Beaver Creek Resort community in Avon, Colorado, Bachelor Gulch was developed in the late 1990s as a private, ski-in, ski-out village integrated directly into the mountain terrain between Beaver Creek and Arrowhead. From its inception, it was conceived as something distinct: a place where architecture, nature, and resort amenity would coexist without compromise.
The anchor of the community is the Ritz-Carlton, Bachelor Gulch — one of the most celebrated ski-in, ski-out luxury hotels in North America. The property offers residents and guests access to its renowned spa, fine dining, and the legendary St. Bernard Dogs who greet skiers at the base lodge, a tradition that has become as much a part of Bachelor Gulch's identity as the skiing itself. The immediate proximity of this world-class resort infrastructure to private residential life is one of Bachelor Gulch's defining characteristics and a significant part of what distinguishes it from other mountain communities.
Beaver Creek Resort, of which Bachelor Gulch is a part, encompasses approximately 1,832 acres of skiable terrain across 150 trails, served by 25 lifts. The mountain is known for its consistently groomed runs, notably Birds of Prey — one of the most technically demanding downhill courses on the World Cup circuit — as well as the quieter, more intimate terrain that defines the Bachelor Gulch experience. The Overshot run, onto which 3712 Daybreak Ridge steps directly, is among the most accessible and enjoyable ski-in, ski-out connections in the village.
Beyond skiing, the Vail Valley offers a remarkably complete lifestyle. The town of Avon, situated in the valley below, provides everyday conveniences alongside the cultural and culinary amenities that have grown alongside the region's reputation as a premier mountain destination. Vail itself — approximately 12 miles to the east along Interstate 70 — is home to world-class dining, high-end retail, and a vibrant arts scene anchored by institutions such as the Gerald R. Ford Amphitheater, which hosts the Bravo! Vail Music Festival each summer, drawing internationally recognized orchestras and performers.
The Vail Valley Medical Center in Edwards ensures access to high-quality healthcare within the community, while Eagle County Regional Airport offers direct and connecting service to major hubs, making the transition between mountain life and global travel genuinely seamless.
Summer in Bachelor Gulch is equally compelling. The mountain transforms into a landscape of hiking and mountain biking trails, with the resort infrastructure remaining active for warm-weather recreation. The nearby Eagle River and its tributaries offer blue-ribbon fly fishing, while championship golf courses — including the Sonnenalp Golf Club and Red Sky Ranch — provide exceptional play within a short drive.
To own at this elevation within Bachelor Gulch is to occupy the literal and figurative summit of one of the most desirable resort communities in the American West — a place where the mountain is not merely a backdrop, but the entire point.
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