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Real Estate Blog

Real Estate News and Updates

5 Tips To Avoid Personal Finance Trouble When Buying A Home

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Fed announces interest-rate decision

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Denver vs. Charlotte: How the Super Bowl 50 cities match up (Slideshow)

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A Columbus-based developer has resuscitated a housing development in Clifton Heights.

Data was provided by company representatives. The List does not include custom homebuilders, which published on a separate list on May 20th. Local includes Hernando, Hillsborough, Manatee, Pasco, Pinellas, Polk and Sarasota counties.

Waukesha manufacturer Wildeck is looking to triple its footprint and create up to 155 new jobs by moving into a former Eaton Corp. facility.

The penthouse features unobstructed views of downtown Boston and comes with Ritz Carlton hotel services as amenities.

The number of multifamily building permits in the Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater MSA nearly doubled from January-July 2022 as compared to the same time frame in 2021, according to data from the U.S. Census Bureau. The 7,180 multifamily permits through July 2022 already exceeded 2021’s total of 5,526 permits.

During that same time, the number of single-family permits dropped by more than 15%. Despite the drop, the Tampa MSA still outpaced most of the state with 10,281 single-family permits, below…

We talk about the trends at Homearama and the latest restaurant news on this week's Access Louisville podcast.

People who relocated during the pandemic favored areas at higher risk of disruption due to climate change, but they may come to regret those moves over the long term, futurist Greg Lindsay told a gathering of the Denver Metro Commercial Association of Realtors on Thursday morning.

“Americans are moving in the wrong direction,” Lindsay said of migration patterns during the pandemic, and even before. “Markets are underpricing climate risk.”

Wrong as in moving from cooler northern coastal areas and the upper Midwest to the Sunbelt. Wrong as in moving to Arizona and Nevada, popular states that suffer from ever-increasing temperatures and worsening drought. Wrong as in flocking in large numbers to coastal Florida and Miami, where rising water levels could submerge vast swaths of land in coming decades if powerful hurricanes don’t scrape them first.

Texas and Florida were the top inbound states for those relocating during the pandemic, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. Spe..