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Crestmoor Park, Hilltop, Or Lowry: How To Choose Your Fit

If you are torn between Crestmoor Park, Hilltop, and Lowry, you are not really choosing between three similar Denver neighborhoods. You are choosing between three very different ways of living, with different housing patterns, amenity structures, and price points. This guide will help you compare what matters most so you can narrow your search with more confidence. Let’s dive in.

Start With the Big Difference

The clearest dividing line between these three neighborhoods is not just cost. It is how each one bundles lifestyle, housing type, and neighborhood structure into ownership.

Crestmoor Park is the most club-centered and private-feeling option of the three. Hilltop offers a more classic Denver feel with public parks and a volunteer neighborhood organization rather than a club or master-planned setup. Lowry has the strongest planned-community character, with mixed housing types and more formal community management.

Compare Prices and Market Pace

Recent market snapshots from February and March 2026 show a clear price ladder. Crestmoor Park sits at the top, Hilltop follows, and Lowry is the most accessible entry point.

Here is a quick look at current signals:

Neighborhood Homes for Sale Median Listing Price Days on Market
Crestmoor Park 9 $3.595M 25
Hilltop 42 $2.30M 46
Lowry 37 $825K 39

Crestmoor Park also shows a median list price per square foot of $565, while Hilltop is at $535. These are snapshots, not guarantees, but they do show how the three neighborhoods are currently positioned.

Crestmoor Park: Club-Oriented and Traditional

Crestmoor Park is best for buyers who want a highly defined neighborhood identity and have the budget to match. Crestmoor Filing One guidelines describe 102 homesites with lots of about 7,500 square feet, and the area is entirely single-family.

Most homes were built from 1936 into the 1960s. The neighborhood is known for generally two-story red-brick homes with pitched roofs, broad front lawns, and mature trees, often in the 3,500 to 4,000 square foot range.

What Stands Out in Crestmoor Park

The strongest lifestyle feature here is the private club structure. Crestmoor’s community association centers neighborhood life around swimming, tennis, and seasonal gatherings.

The facility includes six hard-surface tennis courts, a 25-meter heated pool, a recreation pool, a gated toddler pool, and a pavilion. Membership is annual, sponsor-based, waitlisted, and capped at 375 families, which creates a more exclusive amenity structure than what you will find in Hilltop or Lowry.

Who Usually Prefers Crestmoor Park

Crestmoor Park tends to fit buyers who want:

  • A more formal, private-feeling neighborhood setup
  • Single-family homes with a traditional look
  • Club-centered amenities
  • A smaller housing pool at the top end of the price range

If that combination sounds appealing, Crestmoor Park may feel highly intentional and lifestyle-driven. If you prefer public amenities or more housing variety, one of the other two may be a better fit.

Hilltop: Classic Denver and Park-Centered

Hilltop offers a different kind of appeal. Instead of a club-based identity, it is organized more around architecture, larger lots, and public park access.

The neighborhood is generally zoned E-SU-G with a 9,000 square foot minimum lot size. The neighborhood association describes a wide range of homes, including English Tudors, two-story colonials, Georgians, and newer custom homes and infill.

What Stands Out in Hilltop

Hilltop’s anchors are public and civic in nature. The association highlights Cranmer Park, Robinson Park, Burns Park, and the 6th Avenue Parkway as defining features.

It is also a volunteer RNO rather than an HOA governed by CC&Rs. In practical terms, that usually means less covenant structure than you would expect in a master-planned or club-based neighborhood.

Who Usually Prefers Hilltop

Hilltop often fits buyers who want:

  • Larger lots than you typically see in more tightly planned areas
  • Classic Denver architecture and a broad mix of home styles
  • Access to public parks rather than private club amenities
  • A luxury neighborhood feel without Crestmoor’s club structure

For many buyers, Hilltop lands in a useful middle ground. It offers prestige and architectural variety while keeping the neighborhood experience more public-facing.

Lowry: Planned Community and Housing Variety

Lowry stands apart because it was developed as a mixed-use redevelopment of the former Lowry Air Force Base. That origin story still shapes the neighborhood today.

The area includes nearly 3,000 single-family homes, duplexes, condos, and apartments. Because the housing stock is so varied, the neighborhood offers a broader range of entry points and living arrangements than Crestmoor Park or Hilltop.

What Stands Out in Lowry

Lowry has the most structured planned-community framework of the three. The LCMA maintains common elements such as parks, private roads, alleys, trees, lighting, and monuments.

Lowry also reports about 800 acres of parks and recreational areas, along with neighborhood parks, trails, a golf course, an ice arena, a rec center, and a dog park. Many homes are also part of a second sub-association layer, which adds another level of community management.

Who Usually Prefers Lowry

Lowry often works well for buyers who want:

  • More varied housing choices
  • A lower median price point than Crestmoor Park or Hilltop
  • A neighborhood with strong planned-community features
  • Access to broad recreational amenities across the area

If you value structure, convenience, and options in housing type, Lowry may be the easiest fit of the three.

How To Choose Based on Lifestyle

If you are deciding between these neighborhoods, it helps to ask yourself a few direct questions. The right answer often becomes clearer when you focus less on reputation and more on how you want daily life to feel.

Choose Crestmoor Park If You Want Privacy and Club Life

Crestmoor Park may be your best fit if you want a more private-feeling neighborhood identity and a strong social club component. Its housing stock is more uniform, and the amenity structure is more selective.

That can be a major plus if you are looking for a traditional single-family setting with a defined neighborhood culture. It may be less appealing if you want housing variety or a more open public-park-centered environment.

Choose Hilltop If You Want Space and Classic Character

Hilltop may be the right match if you are drawn to established architecture, larger minimum lot patterns, and neighborhood identity shaped by public green space. The mix of older and newer homes also gives you more architectural variety.

This can be a strong option if you want a legacy Denver feel without stepping into a club-based model. Because Hilltop has more listings in the current snapshot, you may also find a wider set of styles and conditions to compare.

Choose Lowry If You Want Flexibility and Amenities

Lowry may be the easiest match if you want flexibility in property type and a neighborhood built around shared planning and recreation. Its lower median listing price makes it the most accessible of the three in the current market snapshot.

That does not mean it is one-size-fits-all. It means you are more likely to find options across different price points and home formats, which can be especially helpful if you want a condo, duplex, or a detached home in the same general area.

Look Beyond the Neighborhood Name

Even with a strong neighborhood match, block-by-block variation still matters. This is especially true in Crestmoor Park and Hilltop, where remodels, design guidelines, and occasional newer construction can shift the feel from one street to the next.

That is why it helps to tour with a clear framework. Instead of asking which neighborhood is best, ask which one best matches your budget, housing needs, and preferred level of structure, privacy, and amenity access.

A Simple Way To Narrow It Down

If you want a quick way to sort your options, use this checklist:

  • Budget first: Lowry is currently the most accessible, Hilltop sits in the middle, and Crestmoor Park is the highest-priced
  • Housing type next: Crestmoor is single-family only, Hilltop is mostly large-lot single-family, and Lowry offers the widest mix
  • Amenity style: Crestmoor is club-oriented, Hilltop is public-park oriented, and Lowry is planned-community oriented
  • Neighborhood structure: Crestmoor feels more private, Hilltop more open and civic, and Lowry more formally managed

When you frame the choice this way, the decision usually gets easier.

If you want help comparing actual streets, current listings, or off-market possibilities in these Denver neighborhoods, Gail Wheeler and Kelly Baca offer hands-on, principal-led guidance to help you find the right fit with clarity and confidence.

FAQs

Which neighborhood has the highest home prices: Crestmoor Park, Hilltop, or Lowry?

  • Recent 2026 market snapshots show Crestmoor Park with the highest median listing price at $3.595M, followed by Hilltop at $2.30M, and Lowry at $825K.

Which neighborhood offers the most housing variety in Crestmoor Park, Hilltop, and Lowry?

  • Lowry offers the most housing variety, with single-family homes, duplexes, condos, and apartments across its mixed-use community.

Which neighborhood has private club amenities in Crestmoor Park, Hilltop, and Lowry?

  • Crestmoor Park is the neighborhood most centered on private club amenities, including tennis courts, pools, and seasonal gatherings through a membership-based structure.

Which neighborhood has larger lot patterns in Crestmoor Park, Hilltop, and Lowry?

  • Hilltop is generally zoned with a 9,000 square foot minimum lot size, while Crestmoor Filing One lots are about 7,500 square feet and Lowry has more mixed lot patterns.

Which Denver neighborhood is best if you want public parks instead of a private club?

  • Hilltop is the strongest fit if you want a neighborhood centered on public parks, including Cranmer Park, Robinson Park, Burns Park, and the 6th Avenue Parkway.

Which Denver neighborhood is best if you want a master-planned community feel?

  • Lowry is the best fit if you want a master-planned community feel, with LCMA-managed common elements, broad recreational amenities, and many homes within sub-associations.

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Ready to make your next move in the Colorado real estate market? Reach out to Gail Wheeler & Kelly Baca to get the conversation started. Their expertise and passion will set you up for success.

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