
Leasing is underway at in Belleview Station, bringing a new hotel-style living concept to the Denver market.
Above the Apiary Hotel, a at 4855 S. Quebec St., the 20-story tower features 193 apartments and 13 penthouses.

Each apartment includes quartz countertops, waterfall-edge islands and panelized refrigerators built into custom cabinetry. Residences also feature Thermador appliances, engineered hardwood floors and walk-in closets with built-in storage systems. Many units include balconies with mountain and city views.
With 30% already leased, residences range from one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments and from 905 to 4,072 square feet. The community’s largest floor plan is a three-bedroom-plus-den penthouse.
Pricing varies widely across units. A 905-square-foot one-bedroom one-bath residence on the tower’s seventh floor is listed at a of $3,036, according to the floor plans of the apartments.
At the other end of the spectrum, a top-floor penthouse of more than 2,500 square feet with two bedrooms and 2.5 bathrooms is priced at more than $17,800 per month.
Several amenities also are offered to residents, including a rooftop pool, sauna, co-working spaces and a resident lounge, along with hotel-level services such as valet parking and food and beverage delivery from Keepers Cocktail Lounge and June Gap Market and Cafe.
Residents of the penthouses also have access to the Colony Club, a dedicated lounge offering services such as complimentary valet, package and grocery delivery, monthly housekeeping, monthly car detailing and assistance with dining and entertainment reservations, with additional programming planned.
Developers say the project is the city’s first residential community designed to combine upscale apartment living with hospitality-inspired services, amenities and concierge-style attention typically associated with hotels.
That hotel-inspired approach extends to the sensory experience as well, with common areas scented with an “Apiary scent,” a custom fragrance created exclusively for the property and also available to residents as a candle.
“We thought about this the way a hotelier would. Hospitality drives every decision here, from the way residents are greeted to the way their needs are anticipated to the way spaces are designed to make daily life feel effortless. That comes from a hospitality mindset, not a residential one,” said Sonja Dimond, principal at Denver-based .
Managed by global rental housing operator Greystar, the property was a collaboration between Marriott, Stonebridge and Copford. served as the architect and general contractor for the project.
“What we’ve built here is a service infrastructure designed around residents’ daily lives,” said Jacquelyn Hammond, regional property manager at Greystar.
“Residents shouldn’t have to think about what they need. Our job is to anticipate it. Whether thatap how a space is staffed, how a request gets handled or how someone feels walking through the door at the end of the day, every touchpoint is intentional. At Apiary Residences, that level of care isn’t an amenity; itap the standard.”









