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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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Taylor Morrison Home Corp. is building 62 three-story townhouses in Wendover-Sedgewood, near the intersection of North Wendover and Randolph roads.

An iconic hunting property in South Texas has hit the market for $54,038,785.

The sprawling 18,043-acre La Bandera Ranch, which is being marketed by Whitetail Properties Real Estate, is situated about 15 miles southwest of Carrizo Springs in Dimmit County.

Luxury finishes abound among the three main lodges — the Southwest Lodge, La Sombrilla Lodge and Ponderosa Lodge — which offer a total of 46 bedrooms between them.

A resort-style pool and hot tub, 5,000-foot paved and lighted runway, 14,000-square-foot…

The Boston Business Journal on Thursday held its 2019 Power Breakfast on real estate, drawing a sellout crowd of over 200 people to the Ritz-Carlton on Avery Street.

Attendees heard about major developments taking place in Boston’s Seaport District, which was once a tidal marsh. The area has morphed from a collection of wharves and warehouses into high-end residences, restaurants and hotels, and glass office towers. Parcels of land in the district are selling for tens of millions of dollars.

Real…

The Two Light luxury apartment tower in downtown Kansas City has reached 96 percent occupancy just ahead of hitting its one-year mark. Nick Benjamin, managing director of multifamily development for The Cordish Cos., offers an intriguing update on the status of Three Light.

On April 18, the top agents and executives from across the San Antonio residential real estate industry gathered to celebrate the top teams and agents of 2018 at Pearl Stable.

Click here to see pictures from the event

The Business Journal recognizes the top agents and teams in San Antonio, determined by gross closed sales volume in 2018. The winners were named in the following categories: Luxury Real Estate Agents, Individual Agents, Residential Real Estate Teams and Farm & Ranch Agents.

The…

A New Braunfels' project to store water at the Edwards Aquifer in case of drought received support from the Texas Senate Wednesday.

Single-family home communities in Colorado are built to sell to owners, with some investors sneaking into the mix and grabbing properties to offer up as rentals.

Avilla Buffalo Run in Commerce City represents a different kind of creature, a single-family community built from the ground up entirely for renters and not owners.

“It is a deconstructed garden-complex apartment,” said Reed Ruck, managing director in Denver for NexMetro Communities, the developer. “It is a true hybrid that doesn’t exist in this market.”

NexMetro, based in Phoenix, has built similar communities in Arizona and Texas and recently branched into Colorado, where it has acquired land for three build-to-rent — also called build-for-rent (BFR) — home communities in the northeastern metro area.

Construction is in full swing at Avilla Buffalo Run in Commerce City, which is accepting tenants in the first phase of what will eventually be 123 single-level rental homes. Another 136 homes are underway in Brighton at Avil..

After 111 years, Cherry Hills Village leaders finally scrubbed the city’s maps of Swastika Acres, the name of a 56-lot subdivision that has bewildered new homeowners and served as an uncomfortable relic of the city’s past.

Starting this week, Swastika Acres will officially be known as Old Cherry Hills.

“I think it’s important for our community to bring some closure to this issue,” said Councilman Dan Sheldon, who spearheaded the renaming effort. “The community has cried out for this to be changed.”

On Tuesday night, city council unanimously passed a measure to rename the subdivision.

“It’s the right thing to do,” Mayor Russell Stewart said.

RELATED: Swastika Acres may finally change its name after 111 years

The Swastika Acres subdivision was named in 1908 by the Denver Swastika Land Co., well before the Nazis co-opted the symbol and forever changed its meaning. At the time, the swastika remained a common sight across the Southwest, used by Native Americans for centuries.

The nam..