Broadmoor homes — from mid-century ranches to custom estates near Cheyenne Mountain — require craftsmanship that matches their character. You don't put builder-grade finishes in a Broadmoor home. We specialize in the quality of work these properties deserve.
Broadmoor is Colorado Springs’ most established neighborhood — a mix of mid-century modern ranches, post-war colonials, and custom estates built over several decades against the backdrop of Cheyenne Mountain. These homes have character, history, and in many cases original woodwork, tile, and architectural detail that’s worth preserving rather than replacing.
The work these homes need isn’t the same as Briargate builder-grade upgrades. It’s more specific, more careful, and held to a higher standard of finish quality.
Original woodwork. Many Broadmoor homes from the 1950s through 1970s have original fir, oak, and pine trim that’s been painted over, darkened, or neglected. This is some of the best woodwork in Colorado Springs — old-growth material with profiles that aren’t available new. We refinish it rather than replace it. The process involves chemical stripping, careful detail work in the profile recesses, and a topcoat that lets the wood read as what it actually is.
High-end kitchen and bath work. Broadmoor kitchens and primary baths are where we bring the full scope of our tile, countertop, and cabinetry work to bear. These rooms need to be right — material selection that handles Colorado Springs hard water, professional HVLP finish work on cabinetry, and waterproofing that doesn’t get cut in a wet room.
Custom accent walls and interior features. The architectural character of Broadmoor interiors lends itself to custom interior work — geometric accent walls, built-in bookshelves, wainscoting, and panel detail work that adds to the home’s design rather than working against it.
Exterior maintenance at character homes. The older homes in Broadmoor proper have more complex exterior profiles — brick, stone, custom wood trim, and architectural details that require careful attention during repair and maintenance. We work with these materials with the same care we bring to interior finish work.
The Broadmoor neighborhood faces south and west toward Cheyenne Mountain, which means significant direct sun exposure on the most visible exterior faces of many homes. At Colorado Springs’ elevation, that UV load is roughly 25% more intense than at sea level. South and west-facing exterior wood, paint, and siding on Broadmoor homes needs maintenance on a shorter cycle than the back of the property.
We factor this into exterior project scoping — noting which elevations take the heaviest sun load and recommending maintenance timelines and product specifications appropriate for the actual exposure.
Every Broadmoor project gets the quality of work the home deserves and a written flat-rate estimate before we start.
Every project gets a detailed estimate with flat-rate pricing before work begins.
Request Estimate (719) 243-9718Broadmoor's mid-century homes have original woodwork worth preserving. Here's the refinishing process and what it can accomplish.
Read Guide →Quartz, granite, marble — what holds up to Colorado Springs hard water and what doesn't. Material selection for higher-end kitchens.
Read Guide →Custom pattern walls built for Broadmoor interiors — diamond grids, shadow box panels, and layered geometric designs.
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