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Happy Holidays

Happy Holidays

Best wishes for a wonderful holiday season and a new year filled with peace and happiness from all of us at Sopris Homes.

Portico home

Colorado Solar Energy Industries Association Awards

COSEIA Honors Innovation at 2018 Awards Ceremony

At the first annual Solar and Energy Storage Awards ceremony, COSEIA honored projects and people who have made a difference for the solar industry.

Project Sized 10kW and Under – Southard’s Solar/Sopris Builders, for the Portico Lane Project

For more about the Colorado Solar Energy Industries Association visit: http://coseia.org

Kitchen in custom home in Portico

A Primer on Performance

A primer on high-performance homes

‘High performance homes’ is a term that’s tossed around a lot. We find that there is a lot of variation on exactly what it means or the benefits of owning a high performance home. Here is a very basic primer on what a high performance home is. You can be sure with investments and innovation the definition will continue to evolve.

Sopris Homes was one of the very first high-performance home builders in all Colorado and we’ve got years of experience designing and building high performance homes. Let’s look at a few things we like to think of when we consider a high performance home.

The Energy Act 2005 defines a ‘high performance building’ as one that “integrates and optimizes all major high-performance building attributes,
including energy efficiency, durability, life-cycle performance, and occupant productivity.”

From this definition, it’s clear that a high performance home will not just be energy efficient, but will also incorporate much wider sustainability, durability, safety and cost-in-use features. If you’re not a technical expert, this is a lot to consider when designing and building your new performance home in Colorado.

Energy efficiency

A core element of a high performance home is energy efficiency. Building a home with a great thermal performance is a no-brainer. You get a more comfortable home, low energy bills and help tackle climate change. There’s no reason not to do it.

Residential energy use accounts for around 21 percent of total energy consumption in the U.S. in 2017. By building beyond building code standards we can create warm, toasty homes that don’t tax your children’s earth to run.

We focus first on creating an insulated, air-tight building envelope. Then we look to spec high-efficiency heating and cooling systems and incorporate renewable technologies where possible.

When speaking about energy efficiency and new technologies, solar roofing tiles come to mind. In a 2017 project Sopris Homes implemented CertainTeed Apollo II roofing tiles that were (1) the first Zero Energy project in Colorado to use this new solar roofing tile, (2) the largest residential solar shingle project in Colorado, (3) the first solar shingle project on a concrete tile roof, and (4) the first solar shingle project on a net zero home project. Being innovative and taking bold steps towards high performance building is nothing new to Sopris.

Health and air quality

When we think of air pollution, we don’t really consider it in the context of our homes. But a growing body of scientific evidence indicates that the air inside buildings can be more seriously polluted than the outdoor air especially near populated areas.

Its important to specify a high-performance ventilation system to prevent the build-up of indoor pollutants. Our homes are also built using materials, paints, and sealants with a low VOC (Volatile Organic Compound) content.

Remember, form follows function so a high performance home shouldn’t just look good; it should feel good first and foremost.

Durability and resilience

We want your home to last not just one lifetime, but several lifetimes. Durability is a factor in every decision we take on materials, finishes and construction methods for a project. We seek out more resilient alternatives to traditional products, like wood sidings or rock that may look natural but but is more durable and requires less maintenance.

It’s important to consider the whole-life cost of products when setting your budget for your home. Using durable products may mean a slightly higher up-front cost, but better value over the long term.

Digitally embedded

Consideration of technology in home design used to be just about making sure there were enough power and communication outlets. But all this has changed. With the growth of ‘smart’ home technologies, our heating and cooling systems, appliances, entertainment and security systems can be linked together and controlled from a simple phone app. So you can interact with your home even when you’re on the move.

Life cycle of the building

Environmental performance is not just about reducing the energy consumption of the home. Taking a whole life cycle approach means you look at all the environmental impacts relating to the construction and use of your home.

So what does this mean? Well, it means looking at the materials that go into constructing the home, and how they’re produced and disposed of. It means thinking about how the building will need to perform not just now but ten, twenty or even fifty years into the future.

For example, there are various different types of cladding and siding you could use. A whole life cycle approach considers the durability of these materials and maintenance costs to determine which material is the best value over the lifetime of the home.

Optimal design

Though not part of the formal definition, in our eyes a high performance home must be aesthetically pleasing. Your home doesn’t need to be a contemporary, modern design (though many high performance homes are). Depending on your location, a classic design may fit in better with your surroundings.

The key to designing your perfect home is making sure it meets both your present and future needs. We incorporate design elements such as flexible living areas, linked indoor/outdoor spaces and smart home workstations to make sure your home can adapt as your life changes and integrates new technologies.

All a bit too much detail to think about? If you’re looking for a Colorado Home Builder who specializes in designing and building custom high performance homes, get in touch with Sopris Homes today to learn more.

The Farm at Woodridge Entrance sign

Net-Zero at The Farms at Woodbridge

Don’t be surprised if you find yourself humming a few bars of John Denver’s “Country Roads” on your drive home. That’s the feeling you get when you live at The Farm at Woodridge.

Ideally located just north of Longmont, the gated community of custom homes is surrounded on all sides by pastures, conservation easements and open space. Abundant views of Long’s Peak and the Front Range provide a stunning backdrop.

Award-winning custom builder Sopris Homes is now creating unsurpassed homes in this rarified setting that invokes the American West. Sopris Homes builds highly personalized homes that reflect your unique aesthetic, inside and out. Buyers can choose from a portfolio of innovative plans, collaborate on a custom design, or even bring their own plan. The Sopris team of architects, engineers, design consultants and colorists will partner with you to create the perfect blend of art and science. 

Easy-going luxury Ranch and two-story homes at The Farm start at 3,000 square feet, plus a basement. Each home will feature at least three bedrooms and three baths, which includes a five-piece top-of-the-line master bath. Other Sopris signature features include open, sun-filled spaces, dramatic chef’s kitchens with large center islands, walk-in pantries and custom cabinetry. Designer appliance packages enhance even the simplest task. Elegant floor-to-ceiling finishes make each home a haven of luxurious comfort. Thoughtful details, such as handy storage areas throughout, add livability to your home. Outside, your family will enjoy impressive living areas and minimum three-car garages for your autos and sports vehicles. 

Zero Net Energy (ZNE) homes save money – and the environment Sopris Homes was the first Energy Star builder in Colorado, and continues this legacy at The Farm. All homes at The Farm at Woodridge will be built to Zero Net Energy (ZNE) standards. “Boulder County has some of the most progressive energy-use guidelines in the nation when it comes to new home construction,” explains Tracie Thede, Sopris Homes sales manager.

The county’s BuildSmart Zero Net Energy requirements stipulate that all homes 5,000 square feet and larger that are built in unincorporated Boulder County must produce as much energy as they consume. The mandate will apply to all new homes by the year 2022. All homes at The Farm at Woodridge will be powered by solar photovoltaic panels that produce enough electricity to meet each home’s energy requirements. Excess energy produced by Zero Net Energy homes on sunny days is sent to the grid, creating “credits” that you can draw from on cloudy days.

At the end of the year, you only pay for the cost to connect to the public grid. 50 shades of green The term “green” gets used a lot by homebuilders, but what that means isn’t always black and white. Thankfully, there is a recognized industry standard, known as the U.S. EPA Energy Star program and International Energy Conservation Code.

All Sopris Homes exceed the latest International Energy Conservation Code and carry an E-Star Colorado 5-Star rating and the Energy Star label. Sopris designs and builds homes that function as an integrated system, through smart engineering, quality-controlled construction and performance testing. The heart of your home is driven by a high-performance system that integrates heating, cooling, air circulation and moisture control technology for efficiency and cost savings. You are assured that your home is comfortable, efficient, durable and environmentally responsible.

Your Sopris Home at The Farm at Woodridge comes with a one-of-a-kind comfort and energy usage guarantee. Sopris guarantees that the temperature will not vary by more than three degrees between rooms, resulting in a consistently comfortable living environment and streamlined energy costs. Sopris Homes was the first builder in Colorado to offer this guarantee, a nationwide program. 

Country estates, with city convenience Sopris Homes has reserved 27 sites including six existing homes and four privately-owned home sites. The remaining 17 exceptional home sites at The Farm, range from one acre and up. You will experience a true country feel here – a sense of place that bids you to regroup, relax and renew. But when city life calls, you are still just minutes from all the amenities and services you need. Longmont’s new Village at The Peaks shopping district has a full roster of restaurants, specialty shops and entertainment.

Shopping along Main Street is a great way to experience the local history of the area. Denver International Airport, Estes Park and Rocky Mountain National Park are each less than an hour away. The Farm at Woodridge is in the St. Vrain School District, and is served by Northridge Elementary School, Longs Peak Middle School and Longmont High School. 

Visit The Farm at Woodridge The Farm at Woodridge is located north of Highway 66, west of Highway 287 at Vermillion Road. Construction will begin soon on a Pagosa plan model home and a spec Aspen plan ranch home. Now is the perfect time to reserve your site and begin planning your new home. This article was originally written by L.L. Charles, At Home Colorado.

Berthoud, Colorado

We love Berthoud Colorado

Sopris is very excited to be building in Longs Peak Farms. There are so many things to love about Berthoud Colorado, here are a few of our favorite reasons:

Downtown Berthoud: You can enjoy shopping, dining, coffee shops, and cultural outlets right on Main Street! Be sure to visit the Wildfire Community Arts Center, Little Thompson Valley Pioneer Museum, and the Berthoud Public Library. True to Colorado, the downtown area is also home to a microbrewery – Berthoud Brewing Company. Follow Berthoud’s Facebook Page and town website to checkout upcoming events.

Berthoud Inn: Included in Denver’s 5280 January 2018 issue of ‘Amazing Weekend Getaways!,’ this charming inn is a wonderful place the stay and to host an event. Visit their website at www.BerthoudInn.com.

Little Thompson Observatory: You don’t even need to leave town to explore the universe. Located at Berthoud High School, the Little Thompson Observatory hosts public events and encourages people of all ages to learn more about the universe. Check out their website at www.starkids.org.

Carter Lake Reservoir: Spend a day at nearby Carter Lake Reservoir. This beautiful reservoir is surrounded by public land. You can go sailing, fishing, water skiing, have a picnic and go camping. Learn more at: https://www.larimer.org/naturalresources/parks/carter-lake.

Rich History: Incorporated in 1888, what began as a settlement grew to include a handful of homes, a blacksmith shop, a mercantile store, a small grain elevator, and a log cabin that served as school and church for the community. The tiny settlement known as Little Thompson was renamed Berthoud in honor of Edward L. Berthoud, who had surveyed the rail route through the valley. We are proud of what continues today: a small, friendly community and vibrant lifestyle.

Learn more about Longs Peak Farms here.

Man Fishing

10 Great things to do in Colorado

This is a re-post of a list compiled by The Denver Post of the Top 10 great things to do in Colorado in your lifetime. It serves a s subtle reminder that we live in one of the last best places on earth and there is lots and lots to do all around us. How many of the items on the list can you check off? Take a look at the list:

CLIMB A FOURTEENER

At 14,060 feet, Mount Bierstadt (above) is one of the easiest to ascend, with a wide trail that winds its way through swamps, high-mountain meadows and boulder fields. The journey begins at Guanella Pass, just south of Georgetown. If you worry about having never climbed that high before, put your fears aside. There are so many people – from young whippersnappers to truly elderly – hiking on weekends, it looks like a trip to the mall, but they’ll offer assistance if you need it.

Long’s Peak by moonlight just might be the ultimate adventure. If that’s not for you, climb one of the state’s thirteeners, which are just as majestic but don’t get the same attention. You’re likely to see one of the state’s Rocky Mountain goats staring down at you from a rocky crag, an eagle flying high above, or ubiquitous marmots on the ascent. If your health or other situations won’t allow you to climb, then take the Cog Railway to the summit of Pikes Peak. Or drive to the top of Mount Evans. No matter how you get there, you really will be “on top” of the world, and there’s no feeling like it.

ATTEND A CONCERT AT RED ROCKS

Pack a picnic dinner, get there early and hope it’s a full-moon night. While your immediate goal is to sway the night away to good music, the side shows all add up to an experience like no other: the moon over the stage, lights of Denver in the background, sitting on rock-hewn seats, the smell of concert-goers’ drug of choice. Or go to a sunrise Easter service, no matter your faith.

EXPLORE MESA VERDE

Sometimes we tend to downplay what’s in our own backyard, but as with other ancient ruins around the world, the cliff dwellings at this national park near Cortez should be visited over and over again. Look and marvel on your own or take a ranger-guided tour for more insight into the people who once inhabited the more than 600 dwellings. Only a small percentage of the archaeological sites have been unearthed, but there are enough open to the public to leave you with a sense of awe. Alternatively, take a full-day tour of the Ute Mountain Tribal Park, where a Ute tribal member will guide you through the park’s cliff dwellings and explain Ute history and the many examples of wall paintings and petroglyphs. Tours begin at Tribal Park headquarters 20 miles south of Cortez. Special tours, including those on horseback, are available throughout the year. While there, stop at the Pottery Factory, where tribal members continue to paint traditional patterns and more modern ones on functional, museum-quality pots.

Rafting in Colorado

SINK INTO STRAWBERRY PARK HOT SPRINGS

Let’s be honest. One of the attractions of this place – besides the natural setting near Steamboat Springs – is that you can go au naturel after dark. Masonry walls create pools of different temperatures, so you can always find one that’s “just right.” Spend the night in one of the rustic cabins, or better yet, choose the train caboose, because how many chances will you get to spend the night in a caboose with a fireplace? Other hot springs bubble from the ground in many areas of the state, including the great kahoona – Glenwood Springs. Try some of the smaller ones for a more intimate setting: Hot Sulphur Springs near Granby has several private pools and caves; Mount Princeton Hot Springs near Buena Vista allows visitors to sit in makeshift rock pools in the Arkansas River.

VISIT GREAT SAND DUNES NATIONAL PARK

Hike to the top of one of the state’s greatest natural phenomena, then snowboard down, or just walk as most people do. The park in the San Luis Valley is open 24 hours a day, so climb at sunrise or sunset or under a moonlit sky. Marvel at the beauty of Crestone Peaks, especially during the spring or late fall when the tips are coated in white. Then, in late spring or early summer, dip your toes in Medano Creek if it’s flowing. Climb to the top of Star Dune, the highest at 750 feet, for spectacular views and photo opportunities. Visit during a meteor shower for an unhindered view – no lights, no obstructions – just sky and shooting stars.

TOUCH DINOSAUR TRACKS

Once upon a time, Colorado was mired in water and mud, making it the perfect place to record the wanderings of dinosaurs small and large. You don’t have to travel far to see footprints and bones from giants like the apatosaurus or those of fierce predators like the allosaurus. At Picketwire Canyonlands on the Comanche National Grasslands south of La Junta, walk an interpretive trail that includes more than 1,300 tracks. That’s not the only place in the state where they left a big impression. Several museums and trails near Grand Junction allow you to view bones and tracks in situ. At Dinosaur Ridge in Morrison, tracks, bones and other fossils are etched in stone along the “dinosaur highway.”

LISTEN TO ELK BUGLE

Bring blankets, hot chocolate and other creature comforts, and plan to spend a few hours at dusk and into evening in Rocky Mountain National Park during the September-October rut, when males call out to and herd their “harems.” Moraine Park is a favorite location for listeners, although it’s now so overrun with cars and people that some of the magic has disappeared. Avoid the crowds by driving into the park along less-congested roadways, and you might get lucky and hear some stray calls. As an added bonus, the timing is perfect for aspen viewing, with the dancing leaves turning golden and red as night temperatures cool.

NAVIGATE A MOUNTAIN ROAD

Not those teeny passes, but big, burly, white-knuckle-inducing roads like Independence Pass between Leadville and Aspen. At 12,095 feet, the top of the pass is well above tree line: This is what it means to be in tundra. This narrow road usually closes in September and opens in late May. Independence is the state’s second-highest paved road. America’s highest paved automobile road is the Mount Evans Scenic Byway. That drive, completed in 1927, is less scary than Independence but just as scenic. The parking lot is at 14,130 feet, then you can hike a quarter- mile up a winding trail to the top of the peak at 14,264 feet. (Another way to stand atop the world.) A third option is Trail Ridge Road. While behind the wheel or exploring the area, you can imagine that in winter, snow drifts can get as high as 25 feet tall at the highest elevation, 12,183 feet. Even in July, cold winds blow across the tundra, but ground-hugging plants and flowers blanket the areas between lichen- covered rocks.

BOARD A TRAIN

The state’s economy and towns once were made or broken by the presence of iron rails. Trains still hold a fascination for young and old. Step back in time and ride one of the state’s refurbished rail lines, from the Cumbres & Toltec Scenic Railroad in Antonito to the Georgetown Loop narrow gauge line, to the Winter Park Ski Train. The Durango & Silverton runs daily excursions, even during the winter months. The coal-fired engines pull refurbished cars through canyons and wilderness along the same tracks once traveled by cowboys and miners – even train robbers.

Rafting in Colorado

RAFT THE ARKANSAS

Take a leisurely float trip, or if you live for those adrenaline highs, steel yourself for the bumpy ride only a Class 5 rapids provides. Whether you want a half-day or full-week excursion, steak lunches or a “classical music” cruise, you can find it through one of the area’s many rafting companies. Shop around for deals, but remember the wildest water is in early May as the snow pack melts. Most companies run rafts through September, except of course, in drought years. No need to worry about that this year, if January is any indication.

WE COULDN’T HELP OURSELVES, SO HERE ARE 10 MORE …

Stock show – Attend at least once, not just for the unneeded mops or cookware, but to pay homage to the area ranchers and farmers who help make this state thrive.

Ski Colorado- Schuss down the slopes at any of the state’s great ski areas. If you’ve never skied, take a one-day lesson. At least experience a chairlift, which you can even ride in the summer on most days.

Royal Gorge – It’s not the biggest canyon in the world, but it’s still pretty impressive. Be brave and walk the suspension bridge from end to end.

Go into Colorado’s wilderness – Hike a few hours in and out of one of Colorado’s many beautiful wilderness areas. Or spend a few days in a yurt or camping (not in a full-service park) to experience the wonder of nature.
Hike (or bike) the Colorado Trail – Hop on the trail anywhere in the 500 miles connecting Denver to Durango. You’ll see lakes, wildlife and different ecosystems during your workout.

Cast a fly – You’ll never understand the peace and release of the graceful art of flyfishing until you try it. Don’t buy all the equipment, just take a class with a knowledgeable instructor. You can fish in some of the state’s many Gold Medal waters, but really, who cares if you catch anything?

Hike to a mountain lake – The trail to Hanging Lake near Glenwood is just over a mile long, but strenuous. It’s worth the trip. Don’t worry if your overused knees aren’t up to the task. There are thousands of other mountain lakes just waiting to be found.

Garden of the Gods – Balancing Rock and some other formations look as if they might tumble at any minute, and that’s the beauty of these amazing red natural sculptures. Climbing is allowed on a few more stable areas, so take a picnic and a camera and enjoy.

Cultural institutions – The state has a plethora of fine museums, both massive and tiny, for every interest, from the exotic to the exemplary. Visit at least one each time you plan an adventure around the state.

Festivals – It’s hard to reach a consensus on which is best, so plan to visit a few each month, from Blues and Brews Festival in Telluride to the Estes Park Wool Mart to the Ice Festival in Ouray.

Sopris “Maybell” Model Home

Flatirons Tour of Homes

Sopris “Maybell” Model Home in Erie’s Candlelight Ridge is HBA Flatirons Tour of Homes Winner in the following categories!

  • Best of Tour Gold Award
  • Best Luxury Home Gold Award
  • Best Floorplan Gold Award
  • Best Kitchen Silver Award
  • Best Details and Material Gold Award

For more information about this home and to view some images, click here.