Colorado Springs, Colorado — Regional Market
TopicFrom the Woodfine Projects
Rank 14 North American Regional Market — 7 clusters (2 Tier 1); composite score 48.75; 95.6 km from Denver.
Colorado Springs, Colorado — Regional Market
Colorado Springs is a city of approximately 479,000 residents in El Paso County, Colorado, anchored by a concentration of military installations, higher education, and a substantial healthcare sector that together generate sustained, in-place consumer demand. Located 95.6 kilometres south of Denver, it operates as an autonomous regional economy rather than a satellite of the larger metro. Its co-location footprint — 7 clusters, including 2 Tier 1, 4 Tier 2, and 1 Tier 3 formation distributed across the city's eastern and northeastern commercial corridors — ranks it 14th among the 400 highest-scoring North American Regional Markets.
[edit]Overview
Per Wikipedia, accessed 2026-05-30, Colorado Springs is a home rule city that serves as the county seat of, and the most populous city in, El Paso County, Colorado. The city had a population of 478,961 at the 2020 census, a 15.02% increase since 2010. It is the second-most populous city and the most extensive city by area in the state of Colorado, and the 40th-most-populous city in the United States. Colorado Springs is the principal city of the Colorado Springs metropolitan area, which had 755,105 residents in 2020, and the second-most prominent city of the Front Range Urban Corridor. It is located in east-central Colorado on Fountain Creek, 70 miles (113 km) south of Denver.
El Paso County itself is the most populous county in Colorado, with a 2020 census population of 730,395 — exceeding even the city and county of Denver — and is coterminous with the Colorado Springs Metropolitan Statistical Area.
Colorado Springs sits at the eastern foot of Pikes Peak, on a high semi-arid plateau at roughly 6,000 feet elevation. The regional economy rests on three pillars that each generate sustained, in-place consumer demand: a concentrated military presence (Fort Carson, Peterson Space Force Base, Schriever Space Force Base, the United States Air Force Academy, and the NORAD/USNORTHCOM headquarters at Cheyenne Mountain); a multi-campus higher-education sector led by the University of Colorado Colorado Springs; and a tourism economy organised around Pikes Peak, Garden of the Gods, and the Broadmoor district. The market's position 95.6 km south of Denver — far enough to be an autonomous demand area, close enough to share infrastructure and supply chains — combined with strong civic anchorage within the clusters themselves, produces the composite score that places it 14th on the North American ranking.
[edit]Co-location Profile
Colorado Springs contains 7 co-location clusters spanning the city's eastern and northeastern commercial belt.
| Cluster | Tier | Anchor Composition | Civic |
|---|---|---|---|
| Memorial South | T2 | Hypermarket + Hardware | Memorial Hospital Central, Children's Hospital Colorado at Memorial Hospital |
| Downtown corridor | T2 | Hypermarket + Hardware | Cedar Springs Hospital, Pikes Peak State College Downtown, University of Phoenix |
| North | T2 | Hypermarket + Hardware | Saint Francis Hospital, UCHealth Memorial Hospital North |
| UCCS Corridor | T1 | Hypermarket + Hardware + Price Club + Sport | UCCS (multiple buildings), UCHealth Grandview Hospital, Pima Medical Institute, DeVry University |
| Powers Boulevard | T1 | Hypermarket + Hardware + Price Club | — |
| Northeast | T2 | Hypermarket + Hardware | Saint Francis Hospital, UCHealth Memorial Hospital North, Pikes Peak State College Rampart Range |
| East | T3 | Hardware + Price Club | Penrose Hospital, UCCS (multiple buildings), Colorado Technical University, Pima Medical Institute |
The seven clusters form a continuous commercial belt that traces the city's post-1990 eastward expansion along Powers Boulevard and the connecting arterial corridors between Academy Boulevard, Austin Bluffs Parkway, and Woodmen Road. The two Tier 1 formations sit close to one another in the centre-east of this belt: the UCCS Corridor cluster reaches Tier 1 because it co-locates a full hypermarket (Walmart), two natural-foods anchors (Whole Foods Market and Sprouts Farmers Market), big-box hardware (The Home Depot), a warehouse club (Sam's Club), and a sporting-goods specialist (REI, with two locations), alongside the dense academic and medical footprint of UCCS and UCHealth Grandview. The Powers Boulevard cluster reaches Tier 1 through the rarer four-format combination of hypermarket (Target), natural-foods anchor (Sprouts), two Costco warehouses, and Lowe's. The remaining four Tier 2 clusters each pair a hypermarket (Walmart or Target) with big-box hardware (The Home Depot or Lowe's), and the single Tier 3 cluster pairs Lowe's with Costco without a full hypermarket anchor.
[edit]Civic Infrastructure
Medical anchors present within clusters: Children's Hospital Colorado at Memorial Hospital, Memorial Hospital Central, UCHealth Memorial Hospital North, UCHealth Grandview Hospital, Saint Francis Hospital, Cedar Springs Hospital, and Penrose Hospital — seven distinct hospital campuses across three regional hospital systems (UCHealth, Centura/CommonSpirit, and the Children's Hospital Colorado network).
Academic anchors present within clusters: University of Colorado Colorado Springs (UCCS), Pikes Peak State College (Downtown and Rampart Range campuses), Colorado Technical University, Pima Medical Institute, University of Phoenix, and DeVry University.
Per Wikipedia, accessed 2026-05-30, UCCS is a public research university and one of four campuses that make up the University of Colorado system. As of fall 2023 it enrolled over 11,000 students, including more than 9,000 undergraduates and nearly 2,000 graduate students, and is classified among "R2: Doctoral Universities — High research activity." The university's footprint is unusual for a metropolitan area of this size: UCCS buildings appear in two separate co-location clusters (the UCCS Corridor T1 and the East T3), reflecting the campus's longitudinal layout along North Nevada Avenue and Austin Bluffs Parkway.
Colorado Springs has a notably dense academic footprint relative to its population. UCCS provides the public-university anchor, while the substantial representation of career and technical institutions — Pikes Peak State College operating from two campuses, plus Colorado Technical University, Pima Medical Institute, the University of Phoenix and DeVry — reflects sustained demand for applied credentials. The large active-duty and veteran population associated with Fort Carson and the Space Force installations is a major driver of this demand, as career-transition and GI-Bill enrolment supports several of the private institutions year-round.
[edit]AEC Data
The seven Colorado Springs clusters share ASHRAE Climate Zone 5B (Cool-Dry) and sit entirely within the Western shortgrass prairie ecoregion at the foot-of-Rockies boundary. Köppen-Geiger classification varies by elevation across the market: three clusters at lower elevations on the city's southern and eastern fringes classify as BSk (cold semi-arid steppe), while four clusters at the higher elevations of the UCCS Corridor and northern districts classify as Dfb (warm-summer humid continental). This split — semi-arid shortgrass below, continental above — reflects the city's pronounced elevation gradient as it rises westward toward Pikes Peak.
| Layer | Value |
|---|---|
| ASHRAE Climate Zone | 5B (Cool-Dry) |
| Köppen-Geiger Class | BSk (3 clusters) / Dfb (4 clusters) |
| WWF Ecoregion | Western shortgrass prairie |
| WWF Biome | Temperate Grasslands, Savannas & Shrublands |
[edit]Composite Score
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Tier score | 17 (2×T1 + 4×T2 + 1×T3 = 8 + 8 + 1) |
| Civic multiplier | 1.5× (medical + academic anchors present) |
| Metropolitan distance | 95.6 km from Denver |
| Distance multiplier | 1.91× |
| Confidence | 1.0× |
| Composite score | 48.75 |
[edit]The bottom line
Colorado Springs ranks 14th among North American Regional Markets because three independent demand pillars — military, higher education, and healthcare — converge on the same eastern commercial belt that holds its seven co-location clusters. Its 95.6 km distance from Denver leaves it far enough to function as an autonomous demand area while still sharing Front Range infrastructure, and dense civic anchorage within the clusters lifts the composite score to 48.75. For a site selector, this is a self-sustaining secondary market whose consumer demand does not depend on spillover from a larger metro.
[edit]Wikipedia References
- Colorado Springs, Colorado — Wikipedia, accessed 2026-05-30
- El Paso County, Colorado — Wikipedia, accessed 2026-05-30
- University of Colorado Colorado Springs — Wikipedia, accessed 2026-05-30
Wikipedia content reproduced under CC BY-SA 4.0. Accessed 2026-05-30.