Rising Peaks Living

We're building structured co-living in the Denver metro, coming Spring 2026.

A person stands on a wooden porch in silhouette, looking out toward the Colorado foothills at sunrise.

Our Mission

With a founder who has 10 years of continuous sobriety, we understand how pivotal the transition back into daily life is for someone coming out of inpatient treatment, detox, or another structured program. We also know how exciting and anxiety-inducing it can be to assimilate back into daily life, especially when there isn't a healthy environment to return to.

We aim to create safe, structured living spaces that feel like a home and where recovery and rebuilding can be the priority.

Morning light through a residential kitchen with a wooden dining table set for one.
A wood-cased wall clock at the end of a residential hallway in soft evening light.
An open wooden front door of a residential home in late-afternoon light, with work boots on the threshold and a canvas jacket on a hook.

How we operate

Each Rising Peaks Living home is a residential property with a house manager. The home runs on a consistent schedule and clear house rules, in an environment where adults in early recovery live alongside other adults doing the same work.

We are not a treatment provider. Our residents continue their treatment, therapy, sponsorship, and recovery program work outside the home. The home is the place they live while they do that work.

Talk to us →

Who we serve

We serve adults coming out of:

  • Inpatient treatment or detox
  • Incarceration, parole, or probation
  • A court mandate or specialty court program

Each placement is evaluated on fit. The home is built for adults in early recovery who are committed to the work and want a structured environment to continue it.

How we work with your team

What to expect from us once we open and you place a resident:

  • A response to your initial inquiry within one business day
  • A communication cadence we set with you at intake
  • Same-day notice if a resident relapses or there's an incident that affects the placement
  • A close-out when the resident discharges, planned or unplanned

Talk to us

We're talking to discharge coordinators, hospital social workers, court coordinators, and program managers in the Denver metro right now. If you're one of them, or a family member thinking about what comes after treatment for someone you love, reach out.

Send us a message

Or email us directly at [email protected].