Special to the Daily
Slifer Smith & Frampton Real Estate, which has served many of Colorado’s mountain resort communities for nearly 60 years, is restructuring to accommodate its recent growth and success. Matt Fitzgerald has been promoted to market president of the Eagle County effective immediately. He will be one of four market presidents: one in the Roaring Fork Valley, one in Summit County, one in Eagle County and one in Denver.
“We are a sales-focused company and believe this management change will bring us even closer to our customers and the communities we serve,” said Mark Smith, founding partner, in a news release. “We are widely recognized as a company that supports its brokers like no other company. We believe this reorganization will allow us to serve our brokers at an even greater level. Decentralizing will allow us to have the scale, breadth and capabilities to provide even greater service to our customers.
Transition time: First wave of trails open on Friday in lower and middle valley
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High Country: All aboard the Ganjala
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Everybody Is Capable Of Creating Music: Artist Fellows Expand Music Education In Valley Schools
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Marci Krivonen
There’s a house in Old Snowmass unlike any other home in the Roaring Fork Valley, or in the world for that matter. The home Amory Lovins shares with his wife doesn’t have a furnace and it creates more energy than it uses.
Lovins is a scientist who founded Rocky Mountain Institute, an energy and environmental think tank. He’s become one of the world’s foremost thinkers on energy efficiency. And, he gets some of that inspiration from what he calls the “Banana Farm. Aspen Public Radio s Marci Krivonen reports.