An article today from the Wall Street Journal poses an interesting scenario that could have huge implications for Manhattan’s red-hot apartment market. Rental rates still continue to climb to pre-recession levels and beyond, according to April figures. But there could be a market killer looming on...
Meet five multifamily firms that know how to make the most of their very specific markets.
New York’s Lower East Side, once home to tenement buildings, is slowly being gentrified. The changes include a slew of small, stylish condos such as the one at 60 Orchard Street
Economic pressures have apartment developers reconsidering appropriate product types and locations.
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The New York City–based Gotham Organization recently announced that it has commenced construction on a $520 million residential development encompassing nearly an entire city block in Manhattan.
Bronx building is the first multifamily project to receive a LEED Innovation point for Active Design.
A suburban New York development tests the new urbanist concept in a formerly unfavorable Northeast environment.
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As fundamentals and transactions continue to rise in the apartment industry, the additions to apartment distress slipped $3 billion in the first quarter, which was the lowest level of additions since the third quarter of 2008, according to New York-based research firm Real Capital Analytics (RCA).
These markets are likely to see the biggest increases in multifamily construction in 2011, based on 2010 permit data.
In this follow-up to the Healthiest Markets story, we present a collection of 22 intriguing markets.
A prime Manhattan location with unbeatable views makes Beatrice the new “it” rental.
Attention to detail can turn that master bath into a masterpiece.
The winning student entry in the Build a Better Burb competition calls for a radical form of community involvement to transform Long Island suburbia.
Park Lane at Sea View, Staten Island, N.Y.
A vacant, neglected 1905 New York City public school reopens as a mix of affordable and market-rate condominiums.
Multifamily apartment owners and developers weigh placemaking and economies of scale against the increasingly complex operations and vocal opposition to the creation of megacommunities.
Unemployment Could Thwart the Recovery
Emory Roth's San Remo in Central Park West resonates grandeur and elegance.
The Solaire in New York City pioneered high-rise green building practices.
With the worst of layoffs seemingly behind it, the New York metro is once again poised to be the darling of the multifamily investment community.