I went into Littleton, Colorado with high hopes. I so badly wanted to say "the Littles from Littleton." Plus, my really good friend's sister lives there, which seemed like a promising omen. Littleton lies about 30 minutes south of Denver, and is relatively close to the foothills of the Rocky Mountains. It's touted as a family-friendly option for those who need to be near the Denver area.
Cameron and I spent a day there on our own working and meandering. We started in downtown, having a light lunch and bubble tea at iN-TEA, then moved over to the Edward A. Bemis Public Library. After I finished my work obligations, I walked through Gallup and Ketring Parks, passed the Littleton Museum (closed on Mondays), and read by the Gallup Reservoir. We finished the evening with a great meal (and beer) at Breckenridge Brewery's Farm House and a short trail walk along the South Platte River.
Although Cameron couldn't join, I returned to Littleton a few days later with said friend's sister, Rachel. She showed me the (free) Hudson Gardens and then took me on a driving tour of Littleton's neighborhoods. It was really nice to have the inside scoop on the practicalities of living in Littleton and the low-down on why someone might choose a particular part of town to live in.
The Good
- Cute downtown with a nice mix of restaurants and shops.
- Light rail stop downtown with lots of free park-and-ride parking, allowing easy public transportation access in to Denver.
- Good number of parks and nature walk areas. The river trail goes for 16+ miles and goes all the way to Denver.
- Views of nearby mountains.
- Good community and family-friendly (per Rachel).
The Bad
- When driving, Littleton does not feel distinct from Denver and it's other rolling suburbs.
- Traffic between Littleton and Denver.
- The downtown's main road feels like a blip along a commuter street.
- Unless you live downtown, the neighborhoods are pretty bland looking. Most are just fenced off blocks of properties with no binding factor, other than a nearby strip mall.
- Public transportation is very limited outside of downtown (per Rachel); everyone is very car-dependent.
The Verdict
Nah. I want a community that is stand-alone and cute all over. In some ways, I felt like Littleton was designed to be a rich, white, commuter community from the get-go, and was specifically built to meet families' wish lists, rather than growing organically. Had the downtown vibes extended into the neighborhoods I probably could have stayed interested, but I found the neighborhood layouts and car-dependent living to be very unappealing.
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