www.missionrockouray.com
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Three legally distinct residential units with STR licenses and no HOA dues arranged around a central courtyard on a gated corner lot in beautiful downtown Ouray.
Two spacious 3 bedroom/2 bath units PLUS a charming historic (c.1900) stand-alone cottage with tons of original features and character.
Flexible use scenarios exist for the new owner -- sell off individual units, rent the units in a variety of configurations, or keep the whole thing for a private compound.
Pedestrian friendly location diagonally downhill across 7th Avenue from the beautfifully restored historic Western Hotel.
Hiking trails, shops, spas, restaurants, breweries and historic saloons are a short walk away.
The Mission Rock triplex is one of the few properties for sale today in Ouray with zoning appropriate for short term rentals.
Visit www.missionrockouray.com for a virtual tour of the insides.
117 7th Avenue (#2) -- Street-level 3 bed/2 bath/2070 s.f./225 s.f. storage.
119 7th Avenue (#1) -- Upper-level vaulted ceiling 3 bed/2 bath/1 loft/1454 s.f.
115 7th Avenue (#3) — Historic 1 bed/1 bath/1 loft/761 s.f.
Gated 8200 s.f. corner lot with off-street parking.
Offered at $2,400,000 — 4285 total livable square feet per Assessor* ($560 per square foot).
$560 per square foot is a tremendous value to be downtown in one of the most scenic old mining towns in the Rocky Mountain West.
Please call/email/text to learn more.
*Livable square footage is a net ''paint to paint'' number, exclusive of structural elements.
Originally established by miners seeking silver and gold in the surrounding mountains, the town at one time boasted more horses and mules than people. Prospectors arrived in the area in 1875. In 1877, William Weston and George Barber found the Gertrude and Una gold veins in Imogene Basin, six miles south-southwest of Ouray. Thomas Walsh acquired the two veins and all the open ground nearby. In 1897, Walsh opened the Camp Bird Mine, adding a twenty-stamp mill in 1898, and a forty-stamp mill in 1899. The mine produced almost 200,000 ounces of gold by 1902, when Walsh sold out to Camp Bird, Ltd. By 1916, Camp Bird, Ltd., had produced over one million ounces of gold.[12]: 51, 84–86, 91
At the height of the mining, Ouray had more than 30 active mines. The town—after changing its name and that of the county it was in several times—was incorporated on October 2, 1876, named after Chief Ouray of the Utes, a Native American tribe. By 1877 Ouray had grown to over 1,000 in population and was named county seat of the newly formed Ouray County on March 8, 1877.
Wikipedia
115, 117, 119 7th Avenue, Mission Rock Units 1,2,3
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