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Allowed does not mean buildable

Civic Infill Works is a fee-only ADU and small-infill feasibility advisory for Northern Colorado. The work helps homeowners, small property owners, and mission-driven partners decide whether an accessory dwelling unit is worth pursuing — before they hire a designer, contractor, or lender, and before they take on debt or sign a build contract.

How Civic Infill Works

Colorado’s ADU law and many local code updates have widened the door. They have not answered the question that decides whether a project actually happens: is this parcel, this owner, this budget, and this funding stack able to carry an ADU from idea to occupancy?

Civic Infill Works exists in the gap between policy permission and parcel reality. The firm is not a builder, a prefab seller, a lender, a property manager, or a city service. The role is to give a clear-eyed first read on what is buildable, financeable, and ownable on a specific property, in a specific jurisdiction, under specific rules.

Five things every visitor should leave with

  • Feasibility comes before design. The cheapest next step is almost always verification of one disqualifying question — zoning, utilities, access, title, or financing — not a set of plans.
  • A construction estimate is not an ADU budget. All-in cost includes design, survey, engineering, fees, utilities, site work, construction, financing, contingency, and operations. Estimates that ignore the first or last categories distort the decision.
  • Subsidy is not free money. Affordable financing and public programs can open a project, but they carry rent restrictions, income qualification, affordability periods, or reporting requirements that must match the owner’s goals.
  • Policy is the doorway, not the project. State law and local ADU rules describe what is theoretically allowed. They do not predict what a utility provider, a floodplain map, a plat restriction, or a lender will accept.
  • A no-go answer can save real money. The job is not to produce ADUs. It is to produce honest decisions.

Where you fit

Prospective buyers and the realtors who serve them

You are evaluating a property because it “could have an ADU.” Start with buyer due diligence before the offer is written.

Lenders, CDFIs, and mission capital

You are trying to underwrite small infill or build a finance product that does not yet fit conventional collateral logic. See financing paths and for organizations.

Cities, nonprofits, employers, and foundations

You are designing an ADU pilot, a homeowner education program, a workforce housing strategy, or a public-facing screening tool. Start with policy implementation.

How the work moves

  1. Read first. The free diagnostic and the guides surface the questions most likely to change a decision. Most visitors do not need to pay for anything to know whether the next step is worth taking.
  2. Get a memo when the parcel is real. When the question is specific to a property, a written feasibility or due-diligence memo replaces guessing with a structured first read. See advisory services.
  3. Carry the project forward. Predevelopment, capital stack work, and municipal or funder implementation engagements continue from the same evidence base when a project warrants it.

What Civic Infill Works does not do

Civic Infill Works does not sell plan sets, prefab units, construction contracts, or loans. It does not act as a general contractor, real estate broker, lender, attorney, or city official. Engagements include written disclosure of any reciprocal referral relationships, and the firm declines work where the analysis cannot be performed independently.