The Story Behind
Refined Uptown Living Where Design Meets Daily Ease
There is a particular kind of home that doesn't announce itself loudly—one that earns admiration through consistency, proportion, and a quiet attention to detail. Unit 108 at Denver Square Condominiums is precisely that kind of residence. From the moment warm hardwood floors greet you at the entry, it becomes clear that this condo has been cared for with genuine intention, not merely maintained.
The open-concept living and dining area is organized around a fireplace with a clean tile surround, a feature that lends the room both a visual anchor and a sense of warmth that no amount of ambient lighting can fully replicate. A ceiling fan overhead and sliding glass doors leading to a private patio complete the picture—this is a living room designed equally for quiet evenings in and relaxed entertaining. The patio itself, intimate and well-proportioned, offers enough space for a bistro table and two chairs, making it a natural extension of the interior for morning coffee rituals or unhurried evenings with a glass of wine.
The kitchen flows without interruption from the living and dining areas, reinforcing the home's commitment to open, connected living. Light wood cabinetry pairs with dark granite countertops and a suite of black appliances, creating a high-contrast aesthetic that feels simultaneously classic and current. The adjacent bar seating area is one of the home's most versatile features—equally suited to casual buffet entertaining, a quick breakfast, or a focused work-from-home setup that doesn't require sacrificing a dedicated room.
The primary suite is where the residence makes its most compelling case. New carpet underfoot and a generous walk-in closet with custom built-ins set a strong foundation, but it is the five-piece bath that truly distinguishes the space. Dual sinks, a soaking tub, a separate glass-enclosed shower, tile flooring, and a dedicated linen closet compose a bathroom that functions with the quiet efficiency of a well-appointed hotel suite—without ever feeling impersonal.
The second bedroom, positioned near the front of the home with a pleasant courtyard view and new carpet, offers genuine flexibility. Whether configured as a guest room, a private home office, or a combination of both, it is a room that adapts gracefully to changing needs. The adjacent second full bath, finished in neutral tones, serves it well.
Practical intelligence is woven throughout. An in-unit laundry room accommodates full-size units. A mechanical room provides additional storage beyond the private storage closet included with the unit. A coat closet at the entry handles the organizational demands of daily life with quiet efficiency. Two dedicated underground parking spaces—a rarity in Uptown—complete a package that addresses urban living's most persistent friction points before they arise. A shared, fenced dog run accessible directly from the building adds one more layer of thoughtful community amenity for residents with pets.
Uptown Denver occupies a particular place in the city's imagination—neither the polished formality of Cherry Creek nor the transient energy of lower downtown, but something more genuinely residential, more authentically walkable, and arguably more interesting for both. Bounded roughly by Colfax Avenue to the south and 20th Street to the north, the neighborhood developed in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries as one of Denver's first streetcar suburbs, and its built environment still reflects that heritage. Tree-lined blocks, brick facades, and a human-scaled street grid give Uptown a texture that newer Denver neighborhoods can approximate but rarely replicate.
The address at 1699 North Downing Street places residents at the center of what makes Uptown function so well as a daily habitat. Stoney's Bar and Grill and the Dew Drop Inn are directly across the street—neighborhood institutions with the kind of unpretentious character that takes decades to cultivate. La Bouche, the wine bar occupying a handsome brick corner building nearby, offers a more intimate European-inflected option for an evening out without requiring a car or a reservation made weeks in advance.
The broader culinary landscape within easy walking distance is genuinely impressive by any standard. Steuben's, the beloved American comfort food institution on 17th Avenue, has anchored the neighborhood's dining identity for years. Olive and Finch, known for its seasonal menu and artful approach to café fare, draws a devoted following for both breakfast and lunch. Jelly Café brings a spirited energy to weekend mornings, while Potager has long been celebrated for its commitment to locally sourced, garden-driven cuisine. For coffee, Blue Sparrow and Onefold represent the neighborhood's café culture at its most considered—spaces that take both the product and the experience seriously.
For fitness and daily movement, Orangetheory Fitness provides structured programming within the neighborhood, while the broader grid of Uptown streets and the proximity to City Park make outdoor exercise a natural part of daily life. City Park itself—Denver's largest urban park, home to the Denver Zoo and the Denver Museum of Nature and Science—sits just minutes to the east, offering a green counterweight to the neighborhood's urban density that is genuinely rare in a city setting.
Downtown Denver, with its full complement of professional, cultural, and entertainment infrastructure, is minutes away by car and accessible by bike along established routes. The proximity is close enough to make the city's resources feel immediately available, yet Uptown maintains enough of its own distinct identity and amenity base that residents rarely feel compelled to leave the neighborhood for the ordinary transactions of daily life.
What distinguishes Uptown most, perhaps, is its quality of continuity. The neighborhood has evolved without losing the characteristics that made it desirable in the first place—its walkability, its architectural character, its mix of long-established institutions and thoughtfully curated newcomers. For a residence like Unit 108 at Denver Square, the setting is not incidental. It is, in every meaningful sense, part of what is being offered.
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Curated Content • Presented by Evan Miller


































