NYTimes 36 Hours in Grand Junction

Grand Junction, the western Colorado city that abuts the state’s largest wine region, draws outdoor enthusiasts for its accessibility to both mountain and desert trails, abundance of water sports and the wondrous red-rock formations in Colorado National Monument. An eager adventurer in the late spring can even ski and bike on the same day. What visitors haven’t typically come for — until more recently — is the city’s ambience. Now with a small but growing destination-dining scene, new hotels, expanded arts programming and improvements like an ambitious riverfront development with an amphitheater and the historic train depot’s planned restoration, Grand Junction’s appeals extend far beyond just superb recreation.

Read the full story here.

A Downtown Christmas

As I reflect over the 17 years of living downtown, I realize there is a quiet sense of missing out for those who bypass downtown Grand Junction in the weeks following Thanksgiving. For me, each year, the season arrives with the same sense of novelty, as though I am witnessing it anew.

The season really begins in October when no one else is noticing but I am because when the cottonwoods along Main Street finally release their leaves and the sidewalks fill with brittle gold, I know soon block by block, from the Two Rivers Convention Center east to the Avalon Theatre, the city will begin to prepare itself for what’s to follow.

I have front-row seats—nearly eye to eye with the men suspended in cherry pickers who hoist armloads of lights into the bare branches. I am aware of how unaware they are of me, yet how fully aware of them I am.  It is a familiar ritual, full of anticipation, and one I never grow tired of witnessing.  To think how many lights it might take, and how tedious a job to wrap each tree so perfectly–their handy work will remain dormant for the time being.  But if I am lucky, I will catch that one evening between now and Thanksgiving when a test run of the lights happens.  I am spoiled by my little secret show of lights.  

Thanksgiving weekend:   Across the street, people are gathering around a tree as big as a sumo wrestler strung with hundreds of Christmas lights.  Like so much of my life on Main Street,  hidden in my quiet sanctuary above the festivities, I am aware of them, and they are unaware of me.  As I sit in my bay window thinking of Christmas Vacation and Clark Griswold, I feel that same childlike anticipation as I cross my fingers, hoping that the tree will light up just as it always has.  And when it’s dark enough cheers and laughter fill the air as the tree as big as a sumo wrestler and all the downtown trees burst into holiday cheer for the first time. Carolers take center stage. From my private front row seat, I am awestruck again by this magnificent moment that kicks off the season.

Brooke arrives every year just days before the first weekend of December to polish the fall grime from the windows. He’s been cleaning our windows for years now and he knows the December timeline by heart. And when the Parade of Lights comes through that first weekend of December, it isn’t the floats that move me most, it’s the joy of watching a community collectively declare that the season has arrived.  You know you are never too old to love the parade of lights. After all, who cares if it’s little old Grand Junction’s parade of lights? It’s so deeply human!  It’s magical! And I am enchanted.  

By day, holiday shoppers stroll the streets. By night, trees glow, storefronts shimmer, and Main Street takes on a softer character, illuminated against the long evenings of the Western Slope.  On weekends, I hear the clip-clop of the horse-drawn carriage echoing down the street, adding to the splendor.  It’s like living in an ever-changing scene daily filling my eyes with candy.

At night, lying in bed with thoughts spilling out of my mind, I can see the top of just one tree glowing through my window. It’s three stories tall and the best part—I didn’t have to decorate it.  Its light trickles gently into the darkness—steady, unassuming—a quiet counterpoint of warmth to the cold settling in along the Colorado River corridor.  The holiday season is indescribable, romantic, satisfying here on Main Street. And nobody knows we live, work, and play in this beautiful one-of-a-kind dwelling. I pinch myself another time.  

Christmas On Main Street

Christmas on Main Street is magical. Lights twinkle on all the trees, there are store decorations to enjoy, and the view from the loft will absolutely get you in the holiday spirit. 

Take a ride with JR’s Carriage service and see for yourself! 

The City of Grand Junction also shared this aerial coverage of the Parade of Lights, an annual tradition. While not an aerial view, your view from the window of 346 Main Street is also spectacular and one-of-a-kind! 

Potential and Possibility

Potential and Possibility – December 2007

Between April and December of 2007, my life became a whirlwind of decisions, discovery, and design-driven adrenaline. I had no formal training in interior design—no courses, no certificates, nothing but instinct and the confidence that this hollow, dusty vanilla-shell loft could be transformed into something that felt imported from a Manhattan industrial dream. The space spoke to me the moment I walked into it. It was raw, echoing, full of potential and possibility, like a blank canvas begging for bold strokes.

While the framework of the loft remained mostly intact, I made a few strategic changes that shifted its entire personality. The master bathroom needed refinement, so I reworked the layout to give it a more intentional flow. The landing to the deck was another area where I saw opportunity; I envisioned a space that felt both welcoming and sculptural. Adding the circular sofa cutout and those deep, almost theatrical stairs changed the landing from a transitional area to a feature moment in the home. Beyond those adjustments, the rest of the layout didn’t need to be reinvented—it needed to be revealed.

As my general contractor rolled up his sleeves, I did the same. One of my earliest stops was All Sound Design. I went in thinking I’d outfit a small theatre room. Simple. Straightforward. But by the end of the meeting, the project had evolved into something much more ambitious: full-house sound, integrated security, smart lighting, and—one of my favorite features—the magnetized Main Street entrance. No keys, no fuss; just a discreet code that momentarily released the magnet so you could slip in or out. It was modern, clean, and perfectly aligned with the loft’s emerging personality.

Designing “on the fly,” as I came to call it, felt surprisingly natural. I knew white—white on white on more white—was a risk that somehow wasn’t a risk at all. Done right, white becomes a gallery, a stage, a backdrop that highlights the living that happens on top of it. The expansive white flooring made the entire loft feel like a continuous, unbroken plane. Shades of gray layered subtle dimension onto the space. Schluter metal added sharp, architectural edges. And the glass-tile runner at the top of the stairs became the unexpected jewel—an eye-catching detail that pulled your attention upward as soon as you reached the landing.

Many of the most striking ideas arrived by accident—or maybe intuition. The stainless steel I used to wrap the windows wasn’t initially the plan. Wood casement had been the default, but it introduced complications that pushed me to rethink the approach. Stainless steel solved the problem and simultaneously introduced a sleek, urban texture that defined the entire perimeter of the loft.


The master water closet ended up being another improvisation. A redesign of the shower left such a tight space that a full panel door was impossible. But instead of compromising, we innovated. The double glass door became an elegant solution—spa-like, airy, and unexpectedly sophisticated.

And then there was the rock wall. Originally, the crew intended to take it all the way to the ceiling, a dramatic and undeniably bold statement. But one morning, I walked in to find the stones ending mid-height, rough and ragged at the top. Something about that imperfection—the raw, torn edge—felt alive. It stopped me in my tracks. I told them, “Stop right there. It’s perfect.” And it truly was. The wall felt intentional and organic, as though it had been discovered rather than constructed.

Some elements weren’t spur-of-the-moment at all. Certain features had been planned down to the smallest contour. I was determined to maximize lighting in a way that felt both functional and artistic. From a single electrical box, we extended track lighting in multiple directions, creating a flexible system that turned the loft into a rotating gallery. It illuminated canvases and prints beautifully, but it also left enough ceiling territory to incorporate larger, sculptural fixtures—the kinds that didn’t just brighten a room but defined it.

And then came the doors. Every standard six-panel door was removed and handed right back to the building contractor. In their place went ribbed-glass doors with privacy shades—architectural, airy, refined, and a subtle reminder that even the most utilitarian elements of a home can participate in its story.

By the end of 2007, what had begun as a dusty shell had become an expression of instinct, experimentation, and countless aha moments. It was a space shaped not by formal training but by vision, curiosity, and a willingness to follow inspiration wherever it appeared—even if it showed up half-finished, covered in dust, and beautifully imperfect.

We moved in mid-December, just as the city was transforming itself into a winter postcard. The streets below were lined with magnificently lighted trees—thousands of tiny white bulbs wrapped so tightly around each branch that they turned the night into a warm, glowing canopy. It felt as if the world outside our windows was celebrating right alongside us.

By pure coincidence—or maybe perfect timing—we arrived on the very day of the annual Parade of Lights. As we carried the last boxes inside, we could hear the distant hum of music, the cheers of families gathering downtown, and the slow, steady rhythm of floats rolling through the streets. The city was alive with color and motion, every building draped in festive décor, every shop window sparkling with holiday displays.

From the loft’s vantage point, it felt almost cinematic. The newly installed lighting inside reflected softly off the stainless trim and white surfaces, creating a luminous contrast to the twinkling scene outside. It was as though the exterior and interior were in dialogue—our new home glowing with intention and design, the city glowing with celebration and tradition.

Moving in that day felt symbolic, as if the chapter we were beginning was being welcomed by an entire downtown dressed in its finest. The timing couldn’t have been scripted better.

 

 

Are We Really Doing This? April 2007

April  2007

Are we really doing this?

We visited 346 Main sometime prior — mostly out of curiosity. At the time, the idea of living in the middle of downtown felt far-fetched, even a little impractical. But that evening at 626 on Rood, something shifted. Surrounded by the hum of laughter, the clinking of glasses, and the warm energy that only a thriving downtown can offer, we both realized we didn’t want to just visit downtown — we wanted to live it. 

The next morning, over coffee, we started talking seriously about what that could look like. The more we talked, the more it made sense. We had spent nearly two decades building our lives in this community — living, working, and playing right here in the Grand Valley. What better way to embrace the next chapter than by immersing ourselves in the very heart of it all?

Before long, we found ourselves walking through 346 Main again, this time with different eyes. What once felt like an abstract dream now felt like destiny. The exposed brick, the tall windows overlooking Main Street, the energy of people passing below — it all spoke to us. The building wasn’t just a place to live; it was a reflection of who we’d become — creators, connectors, and champions of the local lifestyle we’ve always loved.

Moving downtown wasn’t just about a new address. It was about embracing change, supporting local, and aligning our way of life with our values. It was about saying yes to community, to creativity, to walking out our front door and being steps away from the pulse of Grand Junction.

Today, when we look out from our windows at 346 Main, we see more than just a street — we see a living, breathing story of growth, vision, and connection. It’s a reminder that sometimes, the best move isn’t the one you planned, but the one your heart leads you toward.

We have never regretted our decision to scrap the plan to build in Redlands Mesa Golf Course, to abandon the road to the subdivision with the three-car garage for the road less traveled.       

ARE YOU ready?

IT'S TIME TO DISCOVER

Life at 346 Main Street

BUILDING LOCATION

ADDRESS:

346 MAIN STREET, GRAND JUNCTION, CO

CONTACT AGENT

JoJo Hubbard

REAL ESTATE PROFESSIONAL

970-250-5815

JJHUBBARD@GJPROPERTIES.COM

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