Address
333 PERRY STREET, SUITE 203,
CASTLE ROCK, CO 80104
Call Us
303-766-8766
We Are Here For You.
Respect | Results | Response
Free Consultation

Highlands Ranch, Colorado Car Accident Lawyer

Highlands Ranch was built on a promise: the planned community, the safe streets, the good schools, the 8,200 acres of backcountry wilderness just beyond your back fence. More than 101,000 people believed that promise enough to make Highlands Ranch the most populous unincorporated community in Colorado. Their median household income is $155,847. Their commute takes an average of 24.9 minutes. Nearly 98% of them drive to work. And every morning, those 101,000 residents funnel onto a road network anchored by two corridors that the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office has identified as among the most dangerous in the county: South Broadway at C-470, and the C-470 corridor itself.

The promise of a planned community does not include a plan for the driver who loses control exiting C-470 onto Broadway and kills two road workers. It does not include a plan for the 13-year-old boy crossing Highlands Ranch Parkway in a marked crosswalk with a walk signal, struck and killed by a van whose driver did not see him. It does not include a plan for the 33 accidents per year at a single intersection that the Sheriff’s Office called the most dangerous in all of Douglas County.

Travis Legal Offices represents Highlands Ranch residents injured in car accidents, truck crashes, pedestrian collisions, and motorcycle wrecks on the roads that cut through this community. Our Castle Rock office is 15 minutes south on I-25, and we have spent over 26 years representing Douglas County families who are living with injuries that were caused by someone else’s negligence. Highlands Ranch was designed to be safe. When its roads fail you, we step in.

Call (303) 766-8766  for a free consultation.

Get A Free Case Evaluation

    The Most Dangerous Roads and Intersections in Highlands Ranch, Colorado

    South Broadway (Highway 85) and C-470: Douglas County’s Most Dangerous Intersection

    The Douglas County Sheriff’s Office historically ranked this interchange as the number one most dangerous intersection in all of Douglas County. In a single year, it recorded 33 accidents and 3 injuries. In 2012, two road workers were killed when a driver lost control while exiting C-470 onto Broadway. The crash pattern here is driven by geometry and speed: drivers descending C-470’s exit ramp carry highway velocity into a merge with Broadway traffic that requires rapid deceleration and lane positioning. Drivers who are distracted, impaired, or simply unfamiliar with the interchange misjudge the transition. The results are violent. Rear-end collisions, sideswipe crashes, and loss-of-control rollovers are the dominant crash types at this location.

    For Highlands Ranch residents, this intersection is not optional. Broadway is the western boundary arterial, and C-470 is the primary east-west highway connecting Highlands Ranch to I-25, Littleton, and the southwest metro. Avoiding this interchange means adding 15 to 20 minutes to a commute. Most people do not have that time. So they drive through it every day, knowing the risk, hoping the other drivers are paying attention.

    C-470 Corridor Through Highlands Ranch

    C-470 runs along the northern edge of Highlands Ranch and serves as the community’s primary connection to I-25 (east) and the foothills communities (west). The corridor handles heavy commuter traffic during morning and evening rush hours and is a documented crash hotspot throughout its length. The combination of high speeds, heavy merging traffic at interchanges, and sun glare during westbound evening commutes creates conditions that produce multi-vehicle collisions with regularity. C-470 crashes often involve chain-reaction rear-end pileups in stop-and-go congestion, where following distances collapse and one driver’s inattention triggers a cascade.

    South University Boulevard and C-470

    This interchange sits at the northeastern corner of Highlands Ranch, connecting the community to the Denver Tech Center and Centennial. It handles some of the heaviest traffic volumes in the area, with multiple documented crashes involving vehicles merging onto and off of C-470. The interchange design requires drivers to make rapid lane changes while adjusting speed, a combination that punishes momentary distraction with severe consequences. University Boulevard itself carries high-speed traffic through this stretch, and the transition from highway to surface-street driving catches many drivers still traveling at interstate speed.

    South University Boulevard and Highlands Ranch Parkway

    Ranked 7th on the Douglas County Sheriff’s most dangerous intersection list, this location recorded 12 accidents in the tracking period. The intersection serves as a gateway between the commercial corridor along University Boulevard and the residential heart of Highlands Ranch. A Douglas County Sheriff sergeant identified the chronic issues at Highlands Ranch intersections as texting, speeding, following too closely, and inattentiveness. Those four behaviors are not weather events or design flaws. They are choices. And when those choices cause a collision, the person who made them is liable.

    Highlands Ranch Parkway and Venneford Ranch Road: A Child Killed in a Crosswalk

    A 13-year-old boy was struck and killed by a van while crossing Highlands Ranch Parkway at Venneford Ranch Road. He was in a marked crosswalk. The walk signal was activated. He was doing everything right. The driver did not see him.

    Pedestrian crashes in Highlands Ranch carry a particular weight because the community was designed around walkability. The trail systems, the parks, the sidewalks connecting neighborhoods to schools and Civic Green, they were all built to encourage foot traffic. When a driver kills a child in a crosswalk where the signal said it was safe to walk, the failure is not in the design. It is in the driver’s attention. Colorado law (C.R.S. § 42-4-802) requires drivers to yield to pedestrians in crosswalks. Failure to yield is negligence. When that negligence kills a child, it may also support a wrongful death claim under C.R.S. § 13-21-201.

    Highlands Ranch is the most populous unincorporated community in Colorado, with over 101,000 residents. Its daytime population drops by 12,496 people (12.1%) as residents commute out, meaning the roads absorb two massive traffic surges every single day. Source: U.S. Census Bureau; Douglas County demographic data.

     

    The Commuter Equation: Why Highlands Ranch’s Traffic Pattern Creates Crashes

    Highlands Ranch is a bedroom community. That term is not a criticism. It is a traffic engineering classification with direct implications for personal injury cases. Over 101,000 people live here. Every workday morning, 12,496 of them leave, and the population drops by 12.1%. Every evening, they come back. That means the Highlands Ranch road network absorbs two high-volume traffic surges daily: the morning outflow and the evening return.

    The crash data reflects this pattern. The most dangerous intersections in Highlands Ranch, Broadway and C-470, University and C-470, University and Highlands Ranch Parkway, are all commuter interchange points. They are not dangerous because of their design alone. They are dangerous because 97.7% of Highlands Ranch residents drive to work, and those residents converge on the same corridors at the same times every day. The result is congestion that compresses following distances, increases speed differentials between lanes, and reduces the margin of error for every driver on the road.

    When a defense attorney argues that your crash was caused by “heavy traffic conditions,” the response is straightforward: every driver on C-470 at 5:30 p.m. knows the traffic will be heavy. The conditions are predictable. A driver who rear-ends you in rush-hour congestion was not surprised by traffic. They were not maintaining a safe following distance, or they were looking at their phone, or they were adjusting their navigation. Under Colorado law (C.R.S. § 42-4-1008), a driver must maintain a following distance that allows them to stop safely regardless of conditions. The predictability of Highlands Ranch’s commuter traffic does not excuse negligence. It eliminates the defense’s best excuse.

    Highlands Ranch Emergency Resources

    • Hospital: UCHealth Highlands Ranch Hospital (Level III Trauma Center), 1500 Park Central Drive, Highlands Ranch, CO 80129. Phone: (720) 516-1000. 87 beds, 24/7 Emergency Department. Opened June 2019.
    • Level II Trauma (nearest): Sky Ridge Medical Center, 10101 RidgeGate Parkway, Lone Tree, CO 80124. Phone: (720) 225-1000.
    • Level I Trauma (nearest): Swedish Medical Center, 501 E. Hampden Avenue, Englewood, CO 80113. Phone: (303) 788-5000.
    • Law Enforcement: Douglas County Sheriff’s Office, Highlands Ranch Substation, 9250 Zotos Drive, Highlands Ranch, CO 80129. Non-emergency: (303) 660-7505 (Press 1). Toll-free: (800) 654-2733. Highlands Ranch is unincorporated and does not have its own police department.
    • Colorado State Patrol: Dial *CSP (*277) from cell phone for highway crashes.
    • Emergency: Dial 911.

     

    Where Highlands Ranch Personal Injury Cases Are Filed

    Highlands Ranch is an unincorporated community in Douglas County, which falls under Colorado’s 23rd Judicial District (covering Douglas, Elbert, and Lincoln Counties). Because Highlands Ranch is unincorporated, it has no municipal government, no city council, and no municipal court. All personal injury lawsuits from Highlands Ranch crashes are filed at the Douglas County Courthouse, 4000 Justice Way, Suite 2009, Castle Rock, CO 80109. Phone: (720) 437-6200.

    The unincorporated status matters for one practical reason: crash reports in Highlands Ranch are generated by the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office, not a city police department. Requesting those reports requires going through the Sheriff’s Office records division. Travis Legal Offices handles this regularly and can obtain your crash report, the other driver’s information, and any witness statements as part of our case investigation.

     

    What to Do After a Car Accident in Highlands Ranch, Colorado

    Call 911. For non-emergency crashes, contact the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office at (303) 660-7505. If your crash is on C-470 or I-25, dial *CSP (*277) to reach Colorado State Patrol. Get medical attention at UCHealth Highlands Ranch Hospital’s emergency department. Do not assume you are fine because you walked away from the crash. The crashes at Broadway and C-470 and along the C-470 corridor involve high-speed impacts and sudden deceleration that produce concussions, cervical disc injuries, and internal bleeding that may not present symptoms for hours or days.

    Photograph everything at the scene: vehicle damage, road conditions, traffic signals, skid marks, debris, and weather conditions. If your crash happened during a commuter rush, note the approximate time and direction of travel. Congestion patterns and traffic camera footage from C-470 and the interchange ramps can be critical evidence, but that footage is overwritten quickly. Get witness names and phone numbers.

    Do not discuss fault at the scene. Do not apologize. Do not give a recorded statement to any insurance company before speaking with an attorney. Under Colorado’s modified comparative fault law (C.R.S. § 13-21-111), even a casual apology at the scene can be twisted into an admission of partial fault. Contact Travis Legal Offices at (303) 766-8766. We will meet you at your home in Highlands Ranch, at the hospital, or at our Castle Rock office. The consultation is free and confidential.

     

    Communities We Serve Along the I-25 Corridor

    Travis Legal Offices represents injured people throughout the I-25 corridor and surrounding communities in Douglas County, Arapahoe County, Elbert County, and El Paso County. Click any location below to learn about the specific roads, intersections, and crash patterns in your community.

    • Castle Rock
    • Monument
    • Parker
    • Highlands Ranch
    • Lone Tree
    • Centennial
    • Castle Pines
    • Englewood
    • Littleton
    • Larkspur
    • Elizabeth
    • Franktown
    • Sedalia

    Our office is located at 333 Perry Street, Suite 203, in Castle Rock, at the intersection of Perry Street and 4th Street on the second floor. We also meet clients at their homes, hospitals, or any convenient location throughout the corridor. If you cannot come to us, we will come to you.

     

    A Planned Community Deserves a Planned Defense

    Highlands Ranch was designed from the ground up. Every cul-de-sac, every trail connection, every park and pool and community center was mapped out before the first foundation was poured in 1981. The people who live here chose this community because they wanted something intentional. Something considered. Something safe.

    When a crash on C-470, at the Broadway interchange, or in a crosswalk on Highlands Ranch Parkway shatters that expectation of safety, the response should be just as intentional as the community itself. Not a rushed settlement from a volume firm that has never walked Civic Green or hiked the Backcountry. Not a lowball offer from an insurance adjuster who calls your injuries “soft tissue” because they do not want to pay for the MRI that would reveal the herniated disc pressing on your nerve root.

    Travis Legal Offices is a family-owned trial firm in Castle Rock. We take a limited number of cases from Highlands Ranch and throughout Douglas County so every client gets direct attorney access and a litigation strategy built for their specific injuries, their specific crash, and their specific roads. We prepare every case for trial. Insurance companies know that about us. It changes the way they calculate their offers.

    If you have been injured in Highlands Ranch, call us. The consultation is free. The fight is ours.

     

    Meet Your Attorneys

    Todd A. Travis founded Travis Legal after 26+ years representing injured Coloradans. His career includes complex personal injury work on both plaintiff and defense sides. That experience taught him exactly how insurance companies assess cases and which attorneys they undervalue. He’s tried cases to jury verdict and built this firm on a simple principle: catastrophic injury cases require genuine attention, not assembly-line processing. When Todd’s name appears on a demand letter, insurance adjusters respond differently. He answers client calls directly.

     

     

    Jordan M. Travis joined the firm after law school, bringing a perspective shaped by growing up around trial preparation and legal strategy discussions. His generational approach complements the firm’s established reputation and adds contemporary research methods to how they build cases. Together, Todd and Jordan offer something larger firms can’t replicate: deep trial experience combined with current techniques and the capacity to give each client genuine attention. When you contact Travis Legal, you’re speaking with both attorneys. The same people who will manage your case from investigation through trial.

     

     

    Talk to a Lawyer, Not a Call Center

    When you call, you reach Todd or Jordan. Not a receptionist. Not an intake specialist. Your actual attorney.

    We work on contingency, meaning you pay nothing unless we win. The consultation is free. Given Colorado’s three-year statute of limitations, acting quickly matters. Evidence deteriorates. Video footage gets deleted. Witnesses relocate. Company records vanish.

    Call (303) 766-877 today to talk to us about your case for free.

    Travis Legal Offices, LLC

    333 Perry Street, Suite 203

    Castle Rock, Colorado 80104

    (303) 766-8766 info@travislegaloffices.com

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What are the most dangerous roads and intersections in Highlands Ranch?

    South Broadway (Highway 85) and C-470 was ranked the number one most dangerous intersection in all of Douglas County by the Sheriff’s Office, with 33 accidents in a single year. Two road workers were killed there in 2012. The C-470 corridor is a documented crash hotspot. University Blvd and C-470 sees frequent merging collisions. University Blvd and Highlands Ranch Parkway was ranked 7th most dangerous in Douglas County. Highlands Ranch Parkway and Venneford Ranch Road was the site of a fatal pedestrian crash that killed a 13-year-old in a marked crosswalk.

    Where are Highlands Ranch crash victims taken for treatment?

    Highlands Ranch crash victims are taken to UCHealth Highlands Ranch Hospital, a Level III Trauma Center at 1500 Park Central Drive, (720) 516-1000. The hospital opened in 2019 with 87 beds and a 24/7 emergency department. More serious injuries may require transfer to Sky Ridge Medical Center (Level II) in Lone Tree or Swedish Medical Center (Level I) in Englewood.

    Which court handles Highlands Ranch personal injury cases?

    Highlands Ranch is unincorporated Douglas County, part of the 23rd Judicial District. There is no municipal court. All cases are filed at the Douglas County Courthouse, 4000 Justice Way, Castle Rock, CO 80109, (720) 437-6200. Crash reports come from the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office, not a city police department.

    Does Highlands Ranch have its own police department?

    No. Highlands Ranch is unincorporated and served by the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office, Highlands Ranch Substation, 9250 Zotos Drive, (303) 660-7505. Highway crashes are handled by Colorado State Patrol, reachable by dialing *CSP (*277). For emergencies, dial 911.