In Colorado, outdoor living isn't seasonal. It's part of everyday life.

Morning coffee on the patio. Neighbors stop by as the light fades behind the foothills. Evenings that last a little longer because no one is in a hurry to go inside.

Designing an outdoor space here takes more than picking something that looks good online. The climate here puts real demands on outdoor materials in ways that most product descriptions don't account for.

If you're researching custom patio furniture in Colorado, this guide walks through the custom order process, what to expect at a Colorado showroom, and how to make sure the pieces you choose will hold up where you live.

What's in this guide:

Why Patio Furniture Fails Faster in Colorado

A lot of patio furniture is built for average weather. Colorado isn't average.

At 5,280 feet and above, the conditions that shorten furniture life are more concentrated than most product descriptions account for. UV exposure is more intense. High-altitude sun accelerates fading and material breakdown faster than at sea level. Snow adds real structural weight, sometimes sitting on frames and surfaces for weeks at a time. Freeze-thaw cycles happen repeatedly through winter and spring, stressing joints and seams with each swing. Along the Front Range, wind patterns vary sharply by neighborhood, and clay soils shift patios subtly over time. In mountain towns, afternoon thunderstorms in summer mean cushions need to drain fast or stay wet for days.

These aren't product flaws when furniture fails here. They're climate mismatches, the result of choosing materials designed for somewhere else.

Choosing Materials for Colorado's Climate

Choosing the right materials is the difference between replacing furniture in three years and enjoying it for decades. In Colorado, that decision starts with frame construction, because no cushion or fabric choice matters if the frame fails under snow load or loosens in wind.

The materials that consistently perform at Colorado elevations are cast aluminum, POLYWOOD (HDPE lumber), solid Ipe wood, teak, woven resin over aluminum, and sling construction. Each brings different strengths depending on whether your primary stressor is wind (Front Range), snow load (mountain towns), or UV exposure (everywhere at elevation).

Cast aluminum is the most widely chosen frame in Colorado for good reason: it doesn't rust, holds up under snow, and is heavy enough to stay put in Front Range wind. POLYWOOD requires zero maintenance and is completely indifferent to moisture and temperature cycling, making it the strongest choice for mountain properties where snow sits on furniture for weeks. Solid Ipe wood from Jensen Outdoor handles altitude without the sealing that teak requires. Teak brings warmth aluminum can't replicate but needs annual oiling at elevation. Sling construction dries immediately after storms and asks almost nothing in return.

For cushion fabrics, every cushioned collection in our 2026 lineup is available in solution-dyed acrylic (Sunbrella being the benchmark). At altitude, this is the practical baseline for any cushion application. Reticulated foam cushion construction drains water through rather than holding it, cutting dry time from days to hours after a summer storm.

For deeper material profiles by category, explore our patio furniture materials guide.

Explore Patio Sets & Outdoor Collections

Front Range vs High Rockies: Elevation Changes Everything

Not all Colorado patios face the same conditions.

Front Range (Denver, Littleton, Highlands Ranch, Castle Rock, Fort Collins, Colorado Springs, and Boulder)

Here, wind and soil movement often shape decisions.

Much of the Front Range sits on expansive clay soils that swell and shrink with moisture changes. Over time, subtle ground movement can cause pavers to shift slightly. Adjustable leveling feet and durable aluminum frames tend to perform better than rigid steel in these conditions.

Wind-resistant outdoor umbrellas with stable bases also matter more here than most homeowners initially expect.

If you're still mapping out your space, our step-by-step guide on how to plan your patio can help you think through layout, flow, and exposure before visiting a showroom.

High Rockies (Dillon, Steamboat, Avon)

In mountain towns, snow load isn't theoretical. It's part of life.

Winter snow doesn't just dust your patio. It stacks up. Sometimes for weeks. That kind of sustained weight matters. Furniture needs frames that can handle real accumulation without bowing, loosening, or stressing joints over time. Slatted tabletops shed snow more naturally than flat surfaces, and reinforced aluminum frames tend to hold up better than hollow steel when winter settles in.

Summer brings its own rhythm. Afternoon storms roll through quickly, and cushions built with reticulated foam allow water to drain through instead of pooling, helping them dry faster and last longer.

Up here, durability isn't about overbuilding. It's about building for where you live.

These details may not stand out in an online product description. But you notice them fast when the first big storm hits.

What "Custom Patio Furniture" Actually Means

Custom doesn't mean building furniture from scratch.

It means starting with mountain-tested collections from brands like Tropitone, Jensen Outdoor, Kingsley Bate, OW Lee, Castelle, Hanamint, and POLYWOOD, then tailoring the configuration, fabric, and finish to your home. In addition to premium national brands, Christy Sports also offers its own Christy Outdoor Living collections, designed specifically with mountain climates in mind.

Customization typically includes:

  • Sectional layout adjustments to fit your specific patio dimensions
  • Fabric upgrades, including high-performance solution-dyed acrylics
  • Frame finish selection to match your home's exterior
  • Cushion construction chosen for your climate zone
  • Integrated dining or fire features

Most custom patio furniture orders in Colorado take four to eight weeks, depending on configuration and manufacturer lead times.

That timeline isn't a delay. It's the time it takes to custom-build your furniture the right way. To ensure your space is ready by Memorial Day, we recommend starting the custom process no later than mid-March.

Explore Patio Sets & Outdoor Collections at Christy Sports

The 4-Step Colorado Custom Order Process

Here's how it typically works.

1. Measure and Assess (Dimensions & Wind Patterns)

Bring patio dimensions, photos, and any notes about sun or wind exposure. Even a rough sketch with measurements helps your specialist identify the right configuration faster. If you haven't mapped your space yet, our patio planning guide walks through the process step by step.

2. Consult and Evaluate (Climate & Use Case)

Discuss elevation, soil conditions, weather patterns, and how the space will be used. A Front Range patio in Highlands Ranch faces different stressors than a mountain deck in Steamboat, and the material recommendations will reflect that.

3. Customize and Configure (Materials & Layout)

Select frame, fabric, cushion construction, and complementary features based on performance needs. This is where the conversation gets specific: which finish works with your home's exterior, how many seats you actually need for the way you entertain, whether a fire feature or umbrella should be part of the design.

4. Deliver and Install (White-Glove Placement)

Furniture is delivered, placed correctly, and all packaging removed. If something needs adjusting during setup, the team handles it on site.

Simple. Thoughtful. Built around Colorado realities.

The Value of Working With a Local Patio Specialist

This is where the difference really shows up.

Ordering online can feel simple. Until you're trying to figure out whether your umbrella base is heavy enough for spring winds, or whether your cushions will dry after a July storm.

When you meet with a Christy Sports patio specialist, the conversation is practical.

We start with your actual conditions. How much wind and sun does your patio get? Is the furniture staying outside year-round, or do you have covered storage for winter? Those answers do more to shape the right material and fabric choices than any catalog photo.

From there, we talk through how you actually use the space. Just you on a quiet morning, or a crowd on a Saturday night. Seating that works well for two people can feel cramped when you're hosting, and we'll make sure the layout works for both.

We walk through the materials we carry and give you a straight answer about what holds up best for your situation. Our designers help with the detail work too: proportions, sightlines, how everything fits together across the space.

When your order is ready, we handle white-glove delivery. Your furniture comes in, gets set up where it belongs, and all the packaging leaves with us.

The consultation is complimentary. Our job is to make sure every detail is sorted so you can focus on actually being outside.

Jonah's take: "We see patios that look great in a catalog but don't hold up to Colorado weather. Our job is to help people get it right the first time. The right materials for their elevation, the right layout for their space, and a setup they'll actually want to use every day."

That's the advantage of working with a local team that lives here and sees how these materials perform year after year.

Accessories That Extend Your Season

In Colorado, comfort isn't just about the seating. It's about how often you actually get to use it.

Wind-resistant outdoor umbrellas make bright, breezy afternoons more comfortable, especially along the Front Range where wind can shift quickly. Not sure which style fits your space? Our patio umbrella guide walks through cantilever versus center-pole designs, plus wind considerations specific to Colorado homes.

Fire pits designed for mountain homes help stretch spring and fall well beyond sunset. For sizing, placement, and fuel comparisons, see our guide to choosing the perfect fire pit for your space.

For ideas on keeping your outdoor space usable into fall with heaters, covers, and weatherproofing, see our fall patio guide.

Often, it's the small details that determine whether your patio feels occasional, or everyday.

Is Custom Patio Furniture Worth It?

For many Colorado homeowners, yes. Custom ordering makes sense when:

  • You plan to use your outdoor space frequently
  • You care about long-term material performance at altitude
  • You want a layout that fits your patio precisely
  • You want the aesthetic to align seamlessly with your home's architecture
  • You live in a wind- or snow-intensive environment

In-stock furniture can work well for immediate needs. Custom ordering offers greater control over materials, proportions, finishes, and fabrics, which often translates to better long-term satisfaction.

The right answer depends on your home, your elevation, and how you live outside.

Where to Explore Custom Patio Furniture in Colorado

Custom patio consultations and ordering are available at Christy Sports showrooms across the state.

Denver metro: Shoppers looking for custom patio furniture in Denver can visit our Cherry Creek showroom in Denver proper or Denver West in Lakewood. Arvada operates as a year-round patio showroom and is one of our most fully stocked outdoor living locations. Littleton also runs year-round, making it a strong option for homeowners across the south metro.

Front Range: Custom patio furniture consultations are available in Boulder, Fort Collins, Colorado Springs, and Park Meadows (Englewood). These locations transition to full outdoor living displays in early spring, typically April, with custom ordering available year-round.

Mountain locations: For homeowners in the High Rockies, patio showrooms in Dillon, Avon, and Steamboat Springs understand the specific demands of mountain climates firsthand. The specialists at these locations work with conditions like sustained snow load and rapid temperature swings daily, and they can tell you from firsthand experience what holds up and what doesn't.

Every Christy Sports location offers complimentary patio consultations. Visit a Colorado patio showroom to begin your custom order and see materials in person before making your selections.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does a custom patio furniture order take in Colorado? Most custom orders take four to eight weeks, depending on configuration and manufacturer lead times. Orders placed in March or April are typically ready for early summer use. Waiting until June often means waiting until July or August. If you're planning for a specific event or summer timeline, visiting a showroom in late winter or early spring is the better move.

What patio furniture brands does Christy Sports carry? Our 2026 Colorado lineup includes Tropitone, Jensen Outdoor, OW Lee, Castelle, Kingsley Bate, Hanamint, Ebel, Les Jardins, POLYWOOD, and MoDe, along with Christy Outdoor Living's own Meridian and Ridgway collections, designed specifically with Colorado mountain climates in mind. Frankford Umbrellas round out the accessory lineup. Collections vary by location; contact your nearest showroom to confirm current availability.

What's the difference between cast and extruded aluminum patio furniture? Cast aluminum is poured into molds, producing denser, heavier frames with more intricate detail. Extruded aluminum is pushed through a die, resulting in a lighter, more uniform profile. Both resist rust and hold up well in Colorado's climate. Cast aluminum offers slightly more stability in wind-exposed Front Range areas; extruded aluminum is easier to move and reposition between seasons.

Is custom patio furniture more durable than in-stock options? When materials are selected specifically for Colorado's climate, it often is. Custom ordering means your frame construction, fabric, and cushion build are chosen for your elevation, wind exposure, and how you use the space, not for average conditions in an average market. Proper care extends performance further. Here's how to clean outdoor furniture in Colorado's climate.

Can I leave patio furniture outside year-round in Colorado? It depends on the material. POLYWOOD, cast aluminum, Ipe, and sling furniture can generally stay out through Colorado winters without significant damage. Cushions should be stored or covered during extended snow periods. Not because the fabric fails, but because prolonged compression under snow affects foam over time. For a full breakdown of performance by material, see our patio furniture materials guide.

Where can I see patio furniture in person near me? Christy Sports operates patio showrooms across Colorado, from Front Range locations in Arvada, Littleton, and Cherry Creek to mountain showrooms in Dillon, Avon, and Steamboat Springs. Arvada and Littleton are open year-round. Remaining locations transition to full outdoor living displays in April. Even before then, you can stop in to review materials, discuss custom orders, and work with a specialist.

A Patio Designed for Elevation

Outdoor living here isn't decorative. It's daily life.

The right patio furniture should reflect that. Durable in snow. Stable in wind. Resistant to intense sun. Comfortable enough to gather around long after the light fades behind the peaks.

Choose pieces built for where you live. Want inspiration for bringing it all together? Explore examples of an ideal patio setup for Colorado homes.

OUTSIDE IS BETTER with outdoor furniture worth settling into.

Related Guides



Last Updated: April 7, 2026

In Colorado, outdoor living isn't seasonal. It's part of everyday life.

Morning coffee on the patio. Neighbors stop by as the light fades behind the foothills. Evenings that last a little longer because no one is in a hurry to go inside.

Designing an outdoor space here takes more than picking something that looks good online. The climate here puts real demands on outdoor materials in ways that most product descriptions don't account for.

If you're researching custom patio furniture in Colorado, this guide walks through the custom order process, what to expect at a Colorado showroom, and how to make sure the pieces you choose will hold up where you live.

What's in this guide:

Why Patio Furniture Fails Faster in Colorado

A lot of patio furniture is built for average weather. Colorado isn't average.

At 5,280 feet and above, the conditions that shorten furniture life are more concentrated than most product descriptions account for. UV exposure is more intense. High-altitude sun accelerates fading and material breakdown faster than at sea level. Snow adds real structural weight, sometimes sitting on frames and surfaces for weeks at a time. Freeze-thaw cycles happen repeatedly through winter and spring, stressing joints and seams with each swing. Along the Front Range, wind patterns vary sharply by neighborhood, and clay soils shift patios subtly over time. In mountain towns, afternoon thunderstorms in summer mean cushions need to drain fast or stay wet for days.

These aren't product flaws when furniture fails here. They're climate mismatches, the result of choosing materials designed for somewhere else.

Choosing Materials for Colorado's Climate

Choosing the right materials is the difference between replacing furniture in three years and enjoying it for decades. In Colorado, that decision starts with frame construction, because no cushion or fabric choice matters if the frame fails under snow load or loosens in wind.

The materials that consistently perform at Colorado elevations are cast aluminum, POLYWOOD (HDPE lumber), solid Ipe wood, teak, woven resin over aluminum, and sling construction. Each brings different strengths depending on whether your primary stressor is wind (Front Range), snow load (mountain towns), or UV exposure (everywhere at elevation).

Cast aluminum is the most widely chosen frame in Colorado for good reason: it doesn't rust, holds up under snow, and is heavy enough to stay put in Front Range wind. POLYWOOD requires zero maintenance and is completely indifferent to moisture and temperature cycling, making it the strongest choice for mountain properties where snow sits on furniture for weeks. Solid Ipe wood from Jensen Outdoor handles altitude without the sealing that teak requires. Teak brings warmth aluminum can't replicate but needs annual oiling at elevation. Sling construction dries immediately after storms and asks almost nothing in return.

For cushion fabrics, every cushioned collection in our 2026 lineup is available in solution-dyed acrylic (Sunbrella being the benchmark). At altitude, this is the practical baseline for any cushion application. Reticulated foam cushion construction drains water through rather than holding it, cutting dry time from days to hours after a summer storm.

For deeper material profiles by category, explore our patio furniture materials guide.

Explore Patio Sets & Outdoor Collections

Front Range vs High Rockies: Elevation Changes Everything

Not all Colorado patios face the same conditions.

Front Range (Denver, Littleton, Highlands Ranch, Castle Rock, Fort Collins, Colorado Springs, and Boulder)

Here, wind and soil movement often shape decisions.

Much of the Front Range sits on expansive clay soils that swell and shrink with moisture changes. Over time, subtle ground movement can cause pavers to shift slightly. Adjustable leveling feet and durable aluminum frames tend to perform better than rigid steel in these conditions.

Wind-resistant outdoor umbrellas with stable bases also matter more here than most homeowners initially expect.

If you're still mapping out your space, our step-by-step guide on how to plan your patio can help you think through layout, flow, and exposure before visiting a showroom.

High Rockies (Dillon, Steamboat, Avon)

In mountain towns, snow load isn't theoretical. It's part of life.

Winter snow doesn't just dust your patio. It stacks up. Sometimes for weeks. That kind of sustained weight matters. Furniture needs frames that can handle real accumulation without bowing, loosening, or stressing joints over time. Slatted tabletops shed snow more naturally than flat surfaces, and reinforced aluminum frames tend to hold up better than hollow steel when winter settles in.

Summer brings its own rhythm. Afternoon storms roll through quickly, and cushions built with reticulated foam allow water to drain through instead of pooling, helping them dry faster and last longer.

Up here, durability isn't about overbuilding. It's about building for where you live.

These details may not stand out in an online product description. But you notice them fast when the first big storm hits.

What "Custom Patio Furniture" Actually Means

Custom doesn't mean building furniture from scratch.

It means starting with mountain-tested collections from brands like Tropitone, Jensen Outdoor, Kingsley Bate, OW Lee, Castelle, Hanamint, and POLYWOOD, then tailoring the configuration, fabric, and finish to your home. In addition to premium national brands, Christy Sports also offers its own Christy Outdoor Living collections, designed specifically with mountain climates in mind.

Customization typically includes:

  • Sectional layout adjustments to fit your specific patio dimensions
  • Fabric upgrades, including high-performance solution-dyed acrylics
  • Frame finish selection to match your home's exterior
  • Cushion construction chosen for your climate zone
  • Integrated dining or fire features

Most custom patio furniture orders in Colorado take four to eight weeks, depending on configuration and manufacturer lead times.

That timeline isn't a delay. It's the time it takes to custom-build your furniture the right way. To ensure your space is ready by Memorial Day, we recommend starting the custom process no later than mid-March.

Explore Patio Sets & Outdoor Collections at Christy Sports

The 4-Step Colorado Custom Order Process

Here's how it typically works.

1. Measure and Assess (Dimensions & Wind Patterns)

Bring patio dimensions, photos, and any notes about sun or wind exposure. Even a rough sketch with measurements helps your specialist identify the right configuration faster. If you haven't mapped your space yet, our patio planning guide walks through the process step by step.

2. Consult and Evaluate (Climate & Use Case)

Discuss elevation, soil conditions, weather patterns, and how the space will be used. A Front Range patio in Highlands Ranch faces different stressors than a mountain deck in Steamboat, and the material recommendations will reflect that.

3. Customize and Configure (Materials & Layout)

Select frame, fabric, cushion construction, and complementary features based on performance needs. This is where the conversation gets specific: which finish works with your home's exterior, how many seats you actually need for the way you entertain, whether a fire feature or umbrella should be part of the design.

4. Deliver and Install (White-Glove Placement)

Furniture is delivered, placed correctly, and all packaging removed. If something needs adjusting during setup, the team handles it on site.

Simple. Thoughtful. Built around Colorado realities.

The Value of Working With a Local Patio Specialist

This is where the difference really shows up.

Ordering online can feel simple. Until you're trying to figure out whether your umbrella base is heavy enough for spring winds, or whether your cushions will dry after a July storm.

When you meet with a Christy Sports patio specialist, the conversation is practical.

We start with your actual conditions. How much wind and sun does your patio get? Is the furniture staying outside year-round, or do you have covered storage for winter? Those answers do more to shape the right material and fabric choices than any catalog photo.

From there, we talk through how you actually use the space. Just you on a quiet morning, or a crowd on a Saturday night. Seating that works well for two people can feel cramped when you're hosting, and we'll make sure the layout works for both.

We walk through the materials we carry and give you a straight answer about what holds up best for your situation. Our designers help with the detail work too: proportions, sightlines, how everything fits together across the space.

When your order is ready, we handle white-glove delivery. Your furniture comes in, gets set up where it belongs, and all the packaging leaves with us.

The consultation is complimentary. Our job is to make sure every detail is sorted so you can focus on actually being outside.

Jonah's take: "We see patios that look great in a catalog but don't hold up to Colorado weather. Our job is to help people get it right the first time. The right materials for their elevation, the right layout for their space, and a setup they'll actually want to use every day."

That's the advantage of working with a local team that lives here and sees how these materials perform year after year.

Accessories That Extend Your Season

In Colorado, comfort isn't just about the seating. It's about how often you actually get to use it.

Wind-resistant outdoor umbrellas make bright, breezy afternoons more comfortable, especially along the Front Range where wind can shift quickly. Not sure which style fits your space? Our patio umbrella guide walks through cantilever versus center-pole designs, plus wind considerations specific to Colorado homes.

Fire pits designed for mountain homes help stretch spring and fall well beyond sunset. For sizing, placement, and fuel comparisons, see our guide to choosing the perfect fire pit for your space.

For ideas on keeping your outdoor space usable into fall with heaters, covers, and weatherproofing, see our fall patio guide.

Often, it's the small details that determine whether your patio feels occasional, or everyday.

Is Custom Patio Furniture Worth It?

For many Colorado homeowners, yes. Custom ordering makes sense when:

  • You plan to use your outdoor space frequently
  • You care about long-term material performance at altitude
  • You want a layout that fits your patio precisely
  • You want the aesthetic to align seamlessly with your home's architecture
  • You live in a wind- or snow-intensive environment

In-stock furniture can work well for immediate needs. Custom ordering offers greater control over materials, proportions, finishes, and fabrics, which often translates to better long-term satisfaction.

The right answer depends on your home, your elevation, and how you live outside.

Where to Explore Custom Patio Furniture in Colorado

Custom patio consultations and ordering are available at Christy Sports showrooms across the state.

Denver metro: Shoppers looking for custom patio furniture in Denver can visit our Cherry Creek showroom in Denver proper or Denver West in Lakewood. Arvada operates as a year-round patio showroom and is one of our most fully stocked outdoor living locations. Littleton also runs year-round, making it a strong option for homeowners across the south metro.

Front Range: Custom patio furniture consultations are available in Boulder, Fort Collins, Colorado Springs, and Park Meadows (Englewood). These locations transition to full outdoor living displays in early spring, typically April, with custom ordering available year-round.

Mountain locations: For homeowners in the High Rockies, patio showrooms in Dillon, Avon, and Steamboat Springs understand the specific demands of mountain climates firsthand. The specialists at these locations work with conditions like sustained snow load and rapid temperature swings daily, and they can tell you from firsthand experience what holds up and what doesn't.

Every Christy Sports location offers complimentary patio consultations. Visit a Colorado patio showroom to begin your custom order and see materials in person before making your selections.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does a custom patio furniture order take in Colorado? Most custom orders take four to eight weeks, depending on configuration and manufacturer lead times. Orders placed in March or April are typically ready for early summer use. Waiting until June often means waiting until July or August. If you're planning for a specific event or summer timeline, visiting a showroom in late winter or early spring is the better move.

What patio furniture brands does Christy Sports carry? Our 2026 Colorado lineup includes Tropitone, Jensen Outdoor, OW Lee, Castelle, Kingsley Bate, Hanamint, Ebel, Les Jardins, POLYWOOD, and MoDe, along with Christy Outdoor Living's own Meridian and Ridgway collections, designed specifically with Colorado mountain climates in mind. Frankford Umbrellas round out the accessory lineup. Collections vary by location; contact your nearest showroom to confirm current availability.

What's the difference between cast and extruded aluminum patio furniture? Cast aluminum is poured into molds, producing denser, heavier frames with more intricate detail. Extruded aluminum is pushed through a die, resulting in a lighter, more uniform profile. Both resist rust and hold up well in Colorado's climate. Cast aluminum offers slightly more stability in wind-exposed Front Range areas; extruded aluminum is easier to move and reposition between seasons.

Is custom patio furniture more durable than in-stock options? When materials are selected specifically for Colorado's climate, it often is. Custom ordering means your frame construction, fabric, and cushion build are chosen for your elevation, wind exposure, and how you use the space, not for average conditions in an average market. Proper care extends performance further. Here's how to clean outdoor furniture in Colorado's climate.

Can I leave patio furniture outside year-round in Colorado? It depends on the material. POLYWOOD, cast aluminum, Ipe, and sling furniture can generally stay out through Colorado winters without significant damage. Cushions should be stored or covered during extended snow periods. Not because the fabric fails, but because prolonged compression under snow affects foam over time. For a full breakdown of performance by material, see our patio furniture materials guide.

Where can I see patio furniture in person near me? Christy Sports operates patio showrooms across Colorado, from Front Range locations in Arvada, Littleton, and Cherry Creek to mountain showrooms in Dillon, Avon, and Steamboat Springs. Arvada and Littleton are open year-round. Remaining locations transition to full outdoor living displays in April. Even before then, you can stop in to review materials, discuss custom orders, and work with a specialist.

A Patio Designed for Elevation

Outdoor living here isn't decorative. It's daily life.

The right patio furniture should reflect that. Durable in snow. Stable in wind. Resistant to intense sun. Comfortable enough to gather around long after the light fades behind the peaks.

Choose pieces built for where you live. Want inspiration for bringing it all together? Explore examples of an ideal patio setup for Colorado homes.

OUTSIDE IS BETTER with outdoor furniture worth settling into.

Related Guides



Last Updated: April 7, 2026