Real Estate Blog
Top leaders from Cushman & Wakefield, CBRE join Stream Realty
The new team will source and execute office leasing in the metro Atlanta region.
Nations Roof inks deal to relocate 100 workers to new Arbutus office
The company specializes in creating solar roofing, garden roofs and cool roof surfaces.
The Punch List: Potential new life at a funeral home site, cowarehousing and more in our weekly roundup
More development continues to come to the Near East Side.
‘It’s above a crisis at this point’: United Way of Broward to create 2,500 affordable housing units
The nonprofit received a donation from a billionaire.
AmFam Field entertainment district gets receptive response locally, but may require state law change
Milwaukee County Supervisor Peter Burgelis said he’s only trying to start a serious discussion over developing an entertainment district around American Family Field. So far, he’s gotten a generally receptive, if noncommittal, response from the people who will actually decide whether or not it could happen.
Enclave of 20 new high-end homes launched in downtown McKinney
Grading is underway on College Street blocks away from Historical Downtown McKinney, and new-home construction is expected to begin at the end of the year on a small community by Olivia Clarke Homes.
Orlando home prices shoot up, but most economists say housing market is not a bubble. Here’s why.
Home prices are at record highs even though sales are down and mortgage rates are climbing.
Shake Shack executive lists 17th century Bucks County estate for $1.995M
An historic Carversville home, part of which dates back to the 17th century and was the former studio of a renowned local artist, has hit the market for $1.995 million.
Located at 3589 Aquetong Road, the home spans 2,471 square feet and is currently owned by Shake Shack Chief Development Officer Andrew McCaughan and entrepreneur Brenna Gilbert, according to public records.
Situated near popular Bucks County enclave New Hope, the home has been expanded considerably over the years. At its center…
Rio restaurant moves after 23 years on downtown Denver’s Blake Street
As more Mexican-inspired restaurants continue to open along the Front Range, the relatively old-school Rio Grande wants diners to know that it’s still alive and kicking.
After shuttering its 23-year location on Blake Street on Monday, the restaurant will reopen just three blocks away, at 1745 Wazee Street, on Friday, June 3. Rio owner Pat McGaughran said he bought the Wazee property to be able to better control his destiny as a restaurateur.
The new space will require less staff, it will offer fixed-mortgage costs in a highly variable market and it will come with a built-in clientele of baseball fans and Union Station neighborhood residents, he added.
“LoDo is a different space in today’s world with regard to things that are happening on the street level,” McGaughran told The Denver Post. “So I think that the energy changes block by block these days. And when this location became available on Wazee, we knew that it’s headed in the direction of some pretty significant investment. And..
Did metro Denver’s housing market start to come off a pandemic peak in May?
Price gains flattened and the inventory of homes available for sale continued to rise in May, early signs that the gravity of higher mortgage rates might be finally starting to pull metro Denver’s housing market back to earth, according to a monthly update from the Denver Metro Association of Realtors.
There were 3,652 homes and condos available for sale at the end of May in metro Denver, which is 14% more than the number available at the end of April. More noticeable, the inventory was 76% higher than at the end of May in 2021, when the market was starved for supply.
The inventory of single-family homes available was 111.6% higher than a year ago, while the inventory of condos and townhomes was up 11.5%, an indication that higher prices are pushing buyers more toward more affordable attached housing options.
“Buyers have become more patient in their approach as the cost of money has become more expensive,” Andrew Abrams, chairman of the DMAR Market Trends Committee in comments acco..