Denver has figured out how to make a home for people who stay and people who float, and it shows up in the smallest daily details. You can feel it in the way neighborhoods pace themselves, like they expect new faces every week yet still protect the routines that anchor locals.
Coffee shops double as offices, parks absorb the overflow, and nobody seems surprised by the mix. It is not slick or showy, it is a steady rhythm that says you can plug in for a while and still respect the folks who built the groove.
If that balance sounds tricky, it is, and it is exactly why I want to show you how the city pulls it off.
Remote Work Made Temporary Living Permanent
Start at McGregor Square because it tells the story without saying a word. You stand under the big screens and watch laptops open like they belong to the architecture…