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Monfort Companies Website
Monfort Companies Overview
A NEW PLAYBOOK FOR INVESTMENT AND DEVELOPMENT IN THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN REGION.
We put the needs of the community first by investing in and developing commercial real estate projects that add long-term value and vitality to the Rocky Mountain region and beyond. Grounded by our deep Colorado roots and inspired by the forward-thinking of a new generation, we focus on projects that serve as economic drivers and growth engines for Colorado’s urban and rural communities.
Our approach to investment and development is simple: what’s good for the community is good for us.
We believe in cultivating strong public and private partnerships with the ultimate goal of creating legacy properties that deliver lasting returns and catalyze long-term economic growth throughout Colorado.
Address
1900 Lawrence St, Suite 1930
Denver,
Colorado
80202
Year Founded
2014
Operates In
Colorado
Asset Classes
Development
Accepted Investors
Accredited
Pascal W.
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"My First Dev Deal — Set the Benchmark"
I invested in 1962 Market Street in October 2022 — a ground-up development in Denver syndicated through Denver Angels with Monfort Companies as the developer. The property is now fully built, well-stabilized, and we're expecting to exit within the next six months. This one looks like it's going to be a good outcome. What set this deal apart was how the operator ran the process. They installed video cameras on the construction site and gave investors direct access to the feed — I could watch the building go up in real time. On top of that, communication was consistent throughout: regular updates, photos, progress reports, and detailed financials. For an asset class that carries as much risk as ground-up construction, that level of transparency made a real difference in how I experienced the deal as an LP. This was my first development deal, and I didn't know what to expect going in. Since then, I've participated in several ground-up construction deals, and they are all over the place in terms of performance. Development carries layers of risk that stabilized acquisitions simply don't — construction risk, timeline risk, lease-up risk, permitting delays, cost overruns. You need to make sure you're being compensated for all of that. I'm glad this one turned out well. It opened my eyes to what a well-executed construction deal should look like and gave me a benchmark for evaluating every development deal that's come across my desk since.