Bonnie Brae
Bonnie Brae is located between University Boulevard, Washington Park, I-25, Colorado Boulevard and Cherry Creek. Originally, this neighborhood was designed to resemble a village in Scotland complete with shops, a central park and curving streets. Today, you can find homes of varying architectural styles: Cape Cod, English Tudor, brick ranch and more. Find your new home and a view a variety of homes for sale in the Bonnie Brae Subdivision which can be viewed on by
South Denver
The town of South Denver sprouted along the Broadway streetcar line and grew to be the largest of the streetcar suburbs annexed by Denver. Incorporated in 1886, South Denver stretched from South Alameda to Yale Aves. Between Colorado Boulevard and Pecos St. The middle-class town was annexed to Denver in 1893. Well preserved for the most part, South Denver has the Denver's best collection of bungalows and its first International Style dwelling, the Hegner House (1935), at East Dakota Ave. (SW corner of South University Blvd.).
Tudor
Residential Real Estate
Single Family Residences generally range from approximately 600sq/ft to 3800 finished sq/ft. Most of the homes have received updating and remodeling since the original date of construction. Basements consist of crawl spaces or partial. Investors revitalized the area in the years 2000-2001, completing several renovation projects that increased the size of some of the homes substantially..
Architecture Designs
Architecture Designs in subdivisions surrounding Bonnie Brae in neighborhoods Merrill, Belcaro, and Cory features a wide mixture of both contemporary and traditional floor plans. A wide range of Architectural styles range from small bungalows to elegant sprawling ranches, and a handful of two-story homes. These neighborhoods began early 1911 and gradually grew til the mid 1960’s. The area began to revitalize during the real estate boom of the mid 1990’s