Gaze out from the big upstairs deck at 4400 W. Jamison Place, open Sunday, Feb. 2, in Littleton’s Overlook enclave, and you’ll see that this custom home doubtless has the best view in the area, better even than homes 100 yards down the hill in Littleton’s very exclusive Polo Reserve.
Prices down there run $1.5 to $2.5 million, and in The Overlook, a recent sale a few houses away commanded $1.15 million. But you can have this one for $825,000.
Denver 100 agent Amy Olson, who will show you this 4,779-foot design, says you’re looking at a price difference thatap affected by a well-kept but dated interior (the home had a single owner from the time The Overlook and Polo Reserve opened with fanfare in the late 1990s).
“It appraised at $887,000,” she adds, speculating that somebody willing to redecorate will get something pretty special for their dollar.
That includes a location with a trailhead into the Mary Carter/South Platte Greenway Trail from right in the neighborhood. A mile-and-a-half north are newly rebuilt Columbine Country Club and super-popular Wilder Elementary School (9-out-of-10 stars at GreatSchools.org).
Making the point that Littleton’s great downtown dining district is close, Olson will have slices out Sunday, Feb. 2, from McKinner’s Pizza Bar; if you get lucky, you could win a 50-inch TV the agent is raffling and have it plugged in for the Super Bowl.
You’ll see a Tudor-contemporary exterior in stucco and brick, leading to a two-bedroom-plus-study/three-bath plan with elaborate hardwood trim, a great room with wet bar and fireplace, a kitchen with double oven, glass block in the master bath and a large laundry room, on a near-10,000-foot lot backing to open space. The upstairs bonus room beside that view deck can work as a third bedroom, Olson adds.
Like other agents this spring, Olson is already seeing homes in Littleton moving briskly for this early in the year.
From Littleton’s downtown, take South Santa Fe south two-and-a-half miles to Mineral, then turn west a mile to Overlook Way and turn south.
The news and editorial staffs of The Denver Post had no role in this postap preparation.






