Aerial architectural rendering of the Wyandot duplex by Sloan Building Co., showing the rooftop deck and surrounding Sunnyside neighborhood. Architectural rendering of the Wyandot duplex by Sloan Building Co., corner street view showing brick exterior with dark trim. Architectural rendering of the Wyandot duplex by Sloan Building Co., front view showing the brick and metal forms.
Home Feature

Wyandot

4207 Wyandot St & 2315 W. 42nd Ave  ·  Sunnyside, Denver

A modern duplex in Sunnyside. Two homes shaped by warm minimalism and a walkable corner of Denver.

The Brief

Two homes, kindred but distinct.

4207 Wyandot is a duplex structure on a fantastic corner in Denver’s Sunnyside neighborhood. This property is just a short walk from special gems in the city: The Wolf’s Tailor, El Jefe, Bacon Social House, and Chaffee Park.

The architecture has been designed by Brown Collective Architecture and Design. The approach to this home was to create a building that felt more like a single family home instead of a typical side-by-side mirrored duplex. This successfully created two private entrances into these homes, with subtle unique differences on the interior. This effort has created a beautiful home that has a sense of belonging on this block.

Inside, the two homes are kindred but not identical. They share a four-bedroom layout and a single design language. The aesthetic concept in these homes is Warm Minimalism; a style rooted in Japandi concepts that embraces natural materials, warmth, and clean lined simplicity. Beyond aesthetics, the layouts are designed for function, storage, and everyday ease.

Through the Homes

Inside, room by room.

The mudroom of the Wyandot duplex, with cream cabinetry, a sage built-in bench, and slate tile floors.

The Mudroom

A functional landing zone.

A built-in bench in soft sage, with a row of hooks above and a tall cubby run for everything that needs a home. Slate-look tile floors for the wear of weather and boots. Cream cabinetry and warm globes overhead keep the space feeling like part of the home, not a back-of-house afterthought.

The living room of the Wyandot duplex, with a black slate fireplace, warm wood credenzas, and low natural seating.

The Living Room

Built around the fire.

A black slate-look gas fireplace anchors the room, flanked by warm wood storage and topped with a thick natural wood mantel. A black-framed door opens to the side yard, creating a lovely indoor-outdoor connection.

The kitchen of the Wyandot duplex, with cream perimeter cabinetry, a wood-clad island, dark range hood, and globe pendants over the island.

The Kitchen

Built to be used.

This kitchen is loaded with counter space and functional storage, optimized for both cooking and hosting. A professional-style gas range with a high-power hood and a large undermount granite sink make the actual work easy. The countertops are durable and beautiful quartz. The cabinets are real maple wood with sturdy plywood boxes.

Cream cabinetry pulls to the ceiling on the perimeter, with a wood-clad island as the natural gathering point. A dark microcement range hood becomes the visual anchor. Three globe pendants drop over the island with dimmable control, for layered lighting that meets a range of needs.

The dining room of Unit A in the Wyandot duplex, with a walnut table, boucle chairs, a wood slat feature wall, and brass cylinder lights.

Dining Room · Unit A

A welcoming transition.

The dining room is divided from the home’s main entry by a vertical solid wood slat feature. The slats offer partitioning without weighing the space down or closing the rooms off from each other, so the eye still moves between them.

The dining room of Unit B in the Wyandot duplex, with a light oak table, beige boucle chairs, a yellow modernist painting, and a marble-lined built-in niche.

Dining Room · Unit B

A quieter room, lit by color.

A quieter dining room with beautiful natural light pulling through tall windows in the space. The back wall holds a recessed niche with built-in wood cabinets and a floating shelf above, sized for dining storage and hosting essentials.

The first-level powder room of the Wyandot duplex, with textured grasscloth walls, a floating walnut vanity, marble counter, and a round black mirror.

Powder Room · Level One

Small room, complete idea.

A compact main-level powder room that works for guests and homeowners alike. A floating maple vanity keeps the floor open and the room feeling larger than it is. Texture comes from a unique wallcovering and a natural-stone-look porcelain.

A built-in desk nook in the Wyandot duplex, with a floating wood desk, open shelves, a deep green chair, and a dramatic painting on the opposite wall.

The Desk Nook

A small place to work.

We’ve worked to find functionality in every corner of this home. The built-in desk nook sits just off the main-level kitchen, a simple space for focus time, homework duty, or a landing spot for everyday items.

A hall bathroom in the Wyandot duplex, with a horizontally clad wood feature wall behind the tub, a built-in niche, a wood vanity, and a patterned shower curtain.

The Hall Bath

Warm and unfussy.

The hall bath is warm and welcoming. A unique full-wall shelf inside the shower acts as both storage and display, while fluted wood-look tile gives the tub area a spa-like quality. Warm wood cabinets offer plenty of storage, with durable porcelain throughout to keep the space grounded and easy to maintain.

The primary bathroom of the Wyandot duplex, with a double walnut vanity, marble counter, black mirrors and sconces, and a walk-in shower with a built-in bench.

The Primary Bath

Built around storage and warmth.

The maple wood vanity offers ample drawer storage below, with medicine cabinets above for the things that need to be close. A large walk-in shower with an integrated bench and a narrow niche running the length of the back wall. Natural daylight pulls in from above. Warm, welcoming, a retreat from the rest of the day.

The Basement

A second living level.

Each home has a fully finished basement below the main level, with a generous family or flex room, a bedroom, and a full bathroom. Room for guest stays, a teen retreat, or the everyday spillover of family life.

The Roof Deck

A doghouse to a view.

A small doghouse structure on the upper level holds the stair that opens out to a massive roof deck above. Open sky, neighborhood views, and room enough to host or to keep entirely to yourself.

The Numbers

Home Specs & Size

Unit A

4207 Wyandot St

Bedrooms
4
Bathrooms
4
Interior
2,443sq ft
Garage
2cars
Unit B

2315 W. 42nd Ave

Bedrooms
4
Bathrooms
4
Interior
2,427sq ft
Garage
2cars
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