$1600 a month isn't exactly one helluva bargain, but in a fairly hot resort town like Steamboat, it's not bad.
I'll stay skeptical since it sounds a lot like "company housing", and I'm not going to give any billionaire any credit for suddenly developing some sense of altruistic do-gooder thing.
My default position is still:
Billionaires are parasites
And I won't be changing that until I see consistent, widespread, and ongoing evidence to the contrary.

Venture capital investor and Steamboat Springs resident Mark Stevens acquired the 104-unit Riverview apartment complex for more than $95 million and offered units for well below market rates
Landin Hutchison was ready. The minute the office at the Riverview apartment complex opened, he was there with money in hand. A month later, he and his partner, Piper Rillos, who works with special needs students at Sleeping Giant School, and their 2-year-old son were moving into a new two-bedroom apartment in downtown Steamboat Springs, paying a little over $2,100 a month .
“We are pretty much saving a grand a month and living in town now,” said Hutchinson, a construction worker who moved his family from a home near Oak Creek a half-hour away. “We feel very, very fortunate. There are a lot of people here who are super appreciative of this opportunity.”
There are more than 100 local residents like Hutchison and Rillos in the new Riverview apartment buildings who can thank the complex’s new owner, 970 Steamboat LLC, which spent $95.3 million on the Riverview apartment complex in September.
The two buildings — a 64,000-square-foot apartment building on about an acre and a 42,000-square-foot building on a half-acre — on the banks of the Yampa River were envisioned as luxury apartments before 970 Steamboat LLC bought the buildings and announced they would rent to working locals for below-market rate prices. The record-setting transaction equated to more than $916,000 per unit.
The apartments were offered a month ago at low rates to anyone working more than 30 hours a week in the valley. There are no income qualifications or requirements for applying through the local housing authority.
“It’s life-changing for these two,” said Kipp Rillos, a professor at Colorado Mountain College who raised Piper and her two siblings in Steamboat Springs, as he moved his daughter into her new home. “They might be able to find a way to stay.”
The Riverview project has a long and unsettled history in Steamboat Springs. A developer in 2004 first proposed a condo-canyoned village on the 5-acre riverfront parcel, with 70-plus luxury units, seven affordable homes, a hotel, commercial space and underground parking. The late-aughts recession deflated those plans and the project sat largely dormant until 2017.
A Chicago-based investment group that took over the project in the Great Recession listed the entire parcel for sale in 2018 at $31.9 million. But the parcel was sold off piecemeal, with single-family and duplex lots selling for about $1 million, and Natural Grocers and local restaurants buying commercial lots.
Gorman and Company built the apartment complexes last year, with a low-interest loan from the city’s short-term rental tax fund to include 11 workforce housing units. The deal gave the city 11 deed-restricted units out of the 104 units in the two buildings. Gorman and Co. has developed more than 800 affordable housing units across the high country, most of them in Routt and Summit counties.
Then in September, that 970 Steamboat LLC group — which filed organization documents with the Colorado Secretary of State in August — swooped in and bought the whole project.
But unlike the anonymous donor who gave $24 million in 2021 to the Yampa Valley Housing Authority to buy the 534-acre Brown Ranch for local housing and worked hard to conceal their identity, this acquisition is trackable in Routt County records.
The two parcels purchased by 970 Steamboat LLC list an ownership address in Menlo Park, California. The address is the office of S-Cubed Capital, a private family office investment firm founded and managed by billionaire investor Mark Stevens. Stevens and his wife, Mary, have lived in Steamboat Springs since 2020 and in 2021 they bought the 562-acre Strawberry Park Ranch north of downtown.
Stevens is an early investor in tech companies like Nvidia and a minority owner of the Golden State Warriors NBA team. Emails to him and his S-Cubed Capital offices in Menlo Park and Steamboat Springs were not returned. Mark and Mary Stevens in 2013 launched an ongoing philanthropic campaign by announcing they were joining the “The Giving Pledge,” a billionaire-driven philanthropic mission with members like Bill Gates, Ted Turner, MacKenzie Scott and Warren Buffett, to give away a majority of their wealth.
The Stevenses are among a growing number of billionaire investors focusing their urban-generated wealth on Colorado’s mountain towns. Billionaire Mark Walters, who owns the Los Angeles Dodgers, has spent several years buying commercial buildings in downtown Crested Butte. Billionaire energy baron Bill Koch built his own Western town for his art collection outside Paonia. Cable magnate Bob Fanch, owner of Devil’s Thumb Ranch in the Fraser River Valley, is developing hundreds of homes as well as commercial and community spaces in Winter Park. And there are somewhere around 80 billionaires who own homes around Aspen, where Chicago investor Mark Hunt has bought up large swaths of downtown.
“The folks we are trying to house do not have a decade”
A month after buying the Riverview project, 970 Steamboat LLC listed units for rent at prices well below market rates. The line formed quickly for studios renting for $925 a month, two-bedrooms for $1,600 and three bedrooms for $2,125. And aside from the 11 units previously set aside for city workers, there is no public subsidy for the apartments. The qualifications to rent are not tied to income or area median income charts, which have been skewed in mountain towns as work-from-homers relocate to rural communities. The only requirement for renting in Riverview is that tenants work in the community.
“Riverview serves the heart of the Steamboat community by providing true affordability for local workers. This is more than just a place to live in Steamboat, Riverview is about maintaining Steamboat’s culture, community, and connection (with) affordable housing for the neighbors who keep our town strong,” Kimball Crangle, the president of Gorman’s Colorado operations, said in an email. “The people who power this community deserve to live where they work and continue to make Steamboat thrive.”
In increasingly pricey mountain towns, where housing projects take many years to plan, approve and develop and often face stiff opposition from locals irked by density, could the acquisition of existing market-rate complexes become a model for swift answers to acute housing shortages in Colorado’s high country? Could one solution to the high country housing crisis be found in the benevolence of billionaires?
“Much of the high country is tired of growing inequities. Long-term solutions that arise from a home-grown concept will have success in moving forward,” said Crangle, who declined to discuss the ownership of 970 Steamboat LLC. “Conversely, plans that languish soak up the opportunity cost of time, public dollars and attention. In the meantime, that snowball just continues to gain speed while the years just keep ticking by.”
In Steamboat Springs, where voters last year rejected a Yampa Valley Housing Authority plan tobuild 2,264 homes on the Brown Ranch parcel the authority acquired with the anonymous donation, “speed of execution is probably the name of the game right now,” authority director Jason Peasley said.
“Taking something that is built or entitled or further along in the approval process is something we are looking hard at because of the fact that it can accelerate delivery,” Peasley said. “We have a big need right now and in the time it takes to go through the process of acquiring the land and planning the project and getting entitled and then building it … you can easily take a decade. The folks we are trying to house do not have a decade. They don’t even have a few years.”
The Yampa Valley Housing Authority last month began selling units in the Cottonwoods at Mid Valley complex from $266,000 to $464,000, offering the deed-restricted apartments for more than 50% below market rates. The 86-unit development, built with $10 million from the city’s short-term rental tax fund, has a list of more than 300 locals who had lined up to buy, Peasley said. It is the first large offering of for-sale affordable units in more than 20 years in Steamboat Springs.
“Our needs are running away from us and our ability to deliver is not keeping up,” Peasley said. “It’s exciting to see people stepping up with new ideas and different ways to execute. We need to hit this problem with an all-of-the-above strategy.”










