For Homeowners and Residents of Greenbelt Meadows HOA
For Homeowners and Residents of Greenbelt Meadows HOA
We are a community of 122 single dwelling homes located in Boulder, Colorado. This website serves current homeowners and residents with information and details about our HOA as well as references to important City of Boulder resources.
If you have questions about the HOA, you can reach out to the HOA Board by email.
The HOA Board has quaterly Board meetings in April, July, and October, with the Annual meeting in January. All homeowners and residents are welcome to attend these Board meetings.
Street parking in the courts are permitted by the City in designated parking spots. Parking next to the curbs in the courts is not permitted as that is a fire lane and the City does issue tickets for this. Parking is permitted along both sides of Ontario Place.
The HOA has contracted rates with Western Disposal for trash, recycling, and compost and our collection day is Friday. Each homeowner is responsible for their own accounts and service only with Western Disposal.
Signs of any type are not permitted on HOA property or on public right of ways with the exception of address signs posted on the south end of HOA outlots F, G, H, and I.
Below are HOA documents pertinent to Greenbelt Meadows homeowners and residents. Greenbelt Meadows Covenents, Bylaws, Policies and Procedures, and Meeting Minutes are available for access to all Homeowners and Residents here. Since these documents are not intended to be publicly available, you may request access and please include your address and full name. Questions about access can be sent by email.
The Association Manager has all the records for our HOA. Each Homeowner can request copies of past Board meeting minutes, Budgets, Financials, HOA Insurance, Governing Documents, and past Newsletters not currently available here.
Contact our Association Manager for questions about making HOA due payments or to update your contact information such as email and mailing address.
If you are renting your home, you are required to provide and keep current your property manager contact information (if applicable) and tenent(s) email address(s) to the Association Manager. This is to ensure that relevant HOA communications can be shared with them as well.
Many details about the neighborhood can be found through the City of Boulder's website. Here are a few key resources:
All sidewalks are required to have snow removed 24-hours after the snow stops. (https://bouldercolorado.gov/services/snow-and-ice-removal)
Maintenance of right of way & public easement is required by the adjacent owner and can be landscaped without City approval or permit. (City Code: 8-5-17. - Work in the Public Right-of-Way or Public Easement Exempt from Required Permit)
Trees are an important assest and many trees in our neighborhood are actually City trees. The City has an interactive map to help identify whether a tree is a City tree or not: https://bouldercolorado.gov/forestry-and-parks-web-apps-and-maps
City trees with storm damage are the responsibility of the adjacent homeowner. Only branches 10-inches or greater will be removed by the City by request.
Additional information about the City Forestry Department can be found here: https://bouldercolorado.gov/boulder-forestry-faq
All streets in the HOA are City streets and enforcement is done by the City. The full list of parking violoations can be found in City Code: Chapter 6 - Parking Infractions.
Additional questions or requests to the City of Boulder can be done so through Inquire Boulder: https://user.govoutreach.com/boulder/faq.php?cmd=shell
RTD Neighborhood EcoPass Program
HOA Landscape & Shrub Maintenance Map
HOA Irrigation Zone Map v1
HOA Irrigation Zone Map
A Cooridor Vision project was completed in 2024 for the South Boulder Road Corridor from the Table Mesa intersection in Boulder to Lafayette. Full details of this project are found here: https://engage.drcog.org/south-boulder-road-study
The final report is here:
The general concept is to create a fun and safe area for children to play with all natural materials and to promote wildlife habitat in the form of insect hotels, bird/bat boxes, dead hedges, and so forth. Everything in the space would be using/reusing natural materials so it would require no formal maintenance and in the event that no one uses it or wants to "maintain" it, it would simply return to the state it's been in. The hope is that it would improve the park for all and with community support/volunteer efforts would not cost any money.