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If this lone-standing Tennyson Street home sells, what could go in its place?

Slot homes surround it, but the city outlawed them in May. Here's what a developer can do.

Developers could tear down a lone-standing bungalow home on Tennyson Street in Denver's Berkeley neighborhood to build apartments or offices. 

The home, at 4470 Tennyson St., has stayed the same for decades, with the same family living there since the 1960s. Now, the home is for-sale, listed as a "land opportunity for $1.1 million." 

That means, if the home is sold, it will likely be demolished by a developer. 

But unlike the development that surrounds it, the home won't be turned into a slot home. That's because Denver City Council voted to stop building them in May. 

RELATED: Denver city council approves new slot home rules

Instead, a developer could still build a similar structure with an entrance facing the street and no rooftop deck.

Credit: City of Denver

The home on Tennyson is zoned for U-MX-3, which means it could have apartments and offices, just apartments, or just offices. 

The city's zoning map shows how lots or buildings for-sale in neighborhood are zoned. 

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