Case Studies

Our Work

Steady Ownership. Disciplined Execution.

The examples below reflect work carried out through Skip Rock’s operating entities. Details are shared at a high level out of respect for the people, businesses, and communities involved.

Across every situation, the focus has been the same: steady ownership, disciplined execution, and durable improvement.

● VIA NOBLE VENTURE

Transforming a Vacant Property Into a Community Asset

Some projects don’t reward speed. This one needed a long term view, careful coordination with the right tenants, and the patience to let the right use reveal itself over time.

A fully vacant commercial property was repositioned into an active, multi use space, anchored by a permanent home for a charter school. The asset stabilized. The neighborhood gained something it could rely on. And Noble Venture held onto an asset built to serve the community for the long run.

● VIA LEVEL REAL ESTATE

Securing a Long-Term Home for a Growing Business

For many business owners, the annual lease renewal is a quiet source of anxiety. Rents rise. Terms shift. Plans get built around a building the business doesn’t actually control.

We worked with this owner over several years, through site identification, negotiation, and acquisition, to secure a property that let them build equity instead of paying someone else’s mortgage. What started as a leasing conversation became ownership, and with it, the kind of long range planning that only comes when the building is yours.

“Fantastic experience. Luke and Level Real Estate remained committed to helping me achieve my goals and provided immense knowledge throughout the process. Level is a company committed to values and client relationships above profits. It could be the best real estate move of your life. It was for me.”

FORMER INVESTMENT

● VIA GUS’ Commissary

Helping an Operator Become an Owner

Gus’ Commissary is a 3,800 square foot commercial kitchen in Loveland that serves the craft food entrepreneurs who fuel Northern Colorado’s food scene. Skip Rock acquired the facility during a period of operational strain, stabilized the business, and protected continuity for the BBQ operators, bakers, caterers, and food truck owners who depended on it.

We then sold the business to a caterer with the expertise and alignment to carry it forward. The tenants kept their kitchen. The value we built transferred to the new owner. And Gus’ Commissary entered its next chapter stronger than when we found it.