Real Estate Blog
Rio Rancho spec project on trend for the metro’s industrial market
David Torres said he's on track to deliver a 15,715-square-foot industrial space in Rio Rancho by the second quarter of 2023.
Wright Dunbar moves closer to new condos
A commercial building permit for 1000 West Third Street in the Wright Dunbar neighborhood is officially under review.
Historic building at 44 S. Front St. for sale, near future Brooks Museum of Art
The historic former Mid-South Cotton Growers Association building Downtown — right across the street from the future site of the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art — has been listed for sale.
Strada, McCormack Baron Salazar file formal application to remake S.F. public housing complex into mixed-income community
Plans to redevelop the public housing community where Mayor London Breed grew up are shaping up.
Bretton Woods developer pushes back against Davis city requirements
As construction gets underway on his senior housing community in Davis, Bretton Woods, developer Dave Taormino has a frog problem. Or at least, a perceived frog problem.
Roofstock makes acquisition in race to make rental investing easier
The company helps tech workers in the pricey Bay Area purchase rental houses in places like Alabama and Mississippi.
Inside JPI’s $1B apartment joint venture — the biggest multifamily deal in DFW this year
We take you behind a deal in which Irving-based apartment builder JPI is partnering with Dallas-based Waymaker Partners and Madera Residential of Lubbock on five new multifamily communities that will add 1,750 rental units in North Texas. And that's just the first phase of a broader plan.
Student debt forgiveness could hasten Portland homebuyers
“It's going to be huge for a lot of our families.”
CEQA lawsuits challenged nearly 48,000 homes in California in 2020, study finds
It's historically been difficult to quantify CEQA's impact on housing production in California. A new study has some answers.
Youngkin’s affordable housing comments miss mark, advocates say
“The solution to this problem is not more subsidies or loan programs,” Virginia's governor recently said.