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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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Rubicon Point Partners' 423-foot-tall tower at 1750 Broadway adds to the wave of new apartments downtown.

The Frederick Lofts apartments in Milwaukee’s Brewery complex sold Thursday for $16 million to an investment fund created by MLG Capital in Brookfield.

Two sales, closed and pending, of land designated for single-family homes could represent a calm before the storm.

Construction on a smaller version of the luxury condo project — if approved by Council — could begin within a year.

A new report released by the National Low Income Housing Coalition shows metro Orlando has the most severe shortage of rental homes that are affordable to extremely low income households.

Less than a month after opening a “community center” on the block to hear people’s hopes and concerns for the future of Larimer Square, the property’s owner has announced none of the historic buildings there will be demolished.

Jeff Hermanson, Larimer Square’s owner for the past 26 years, and his development partners with Denver firm Urban Villages have held fast to the position that new development along the historically protected 1400 block of Larimer Street is essential to keeping the aging buildings there functional and accessible into the future. The birthplace of Denver in the 1850s, the block today is home to posh shops, restaurants and offices.

Though redevelopment plans released by Hermanson’s group last winter called for alterations to some of the 19th-century buildings, on Tuesday the team declared they will not be knocking down anything historic as part of an effort to design and build new structures on the square.

“We’ve always been focused on retaining the block’s hist..

Meticulously arranged shelves above the stove. Carefully packed crates under the bed. Maybe even an ultra-tall bookcase with an adjoining ladder if you’ve got the requisite ceiling heights.

Organization is key when fitting one’s life into a sub-500-square-foot space. It’s a challenge more metro areas renters are tackling these days as a coastal trend takes root among Denver’s rapidly proliferating apartment buildings. That trend is to go big on tiny.

Micro-apartments or, more accurately, buildings made up exclusively or featuring a high percentage of studio apartment units, are popping up around central Denver.

They appeal to renters who put more stock in location than square footage. They’re heavy on communal spaces and light on parking. They’re priced for people bringing in wages right around area median income or a little less.

And Front Range developers like McWhinney, the owner and operator of the Ride at RiNo “micro-studio” apartment building that opened at 3609 Wynkoop St. i..

The bank said the hope is to be in operation at Trinity Place shopping center by late spring or early summer.