This surging spring market — too many buyers, not enough supply — is doing nothing to dampen the allure of Cherry Creek, Denver’s most prestigious address, where more dining is coming within a short walking distance of its quiet, forested neighborhoods.
“Itap ridiculous,” says Dawn Raymond, Kentwood’s top-selling agent, about the lack of inventory.
Raymond, who did a whopping $135 million in sales in 2019, now sees out-of-state buyers arriving to Cherry Creek to compete with the locals for listings. But she has one to show you Sunday, March 1, about 4 blocks from that dining scene, open 2 to 4 p.m..
At 444 Madison St., you’ll see a “sophisticated urban retreat,” a luxury-attached end unit with lots of north light entering its extra-wide floor plan, accompanied by a rooftop deck and full-wide three-car garage — rarities in this neighborhood.
The vast entertaining area with two of four fireplaces crosses an expanse of cherry-strip floors and opens into a cherry-paneled study and dining room, and a contemporary kitchen with six-burner-plus-grill Wolf range.
Entry areas are connected to the finished basement and upstairs levels by a dramatic circular staircase in custom iron and by an elevator — a coveted asset in Cherry Creek, says Raymond.
The huge master and bath have an upstairs laundry, and the deck on the roof has a bath adjacent and offers viewing from both the west side to Cherry Creek’s skyline set against the mountains, and to the north — easily big enough for a dinner party.
The price is $1.899 million, for three bedrooms, six baths and 5,200 square feet, counting basement finish. Thatap a tad less than a single-family Raymond sold last week off Cedar in Cherry Creek South, without this walkability to the restaurants.
If Cherry Creek is for you and you’re thinking a condo can work, she’s also holding an open house at The Laurel, the only new condo high-rise in Cherry Creek, which has just four units left from $795,000 to $1.040 million, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., before this one, 2 to 4.
The news and editorial staffs of The Denver Post had no role in this postap preparation.







