Rebuilding After a Fire. Are Things Really Just Things?
A writer reflects on what it means to lose nearly everything in a disaster, as she moves into a new home.
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A writer reflects on what it means to lose nearly everything in a disaster, as she moves into a new home.
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Rent-stabilized tenants can request to sublet their apartments in most cases, and landlords cannot unreasonably withhold consent. But what is ‘reasonable?’
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Having poured thousands into an older house with maintenance issues, a single mother aimed her $450,000 budget at something newer and nicer for herself and her teenager. Here’s what she found.
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A solar-powered seafront villa, a three-bedroom house with gardens near Shoal Bay Beach, and a presale in a six-home development opposite the Four Seasons Resort Anguilla.
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Warren Buffett’s Real Estate Brokerage Agrees to $250 Million Settlement
HomeServices of America, the largest residential real estate brokerage in the United States, will settle the claims brought by home sellers who said they were forced to pay inflated commissions, pending court approval.
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The Gen-Z Advantage in Housing
A study suggests that Gen Z has it better in the housing market than the millennials who came before them.
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How Do You Turn ‘Urban Decay’ Into a Garden?
Apiary Studio in Philadelphia works with whatever a site holds to create landscapes that match the city’s aesthetic: “gritty, punk, improvised, layered with history.”
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Judge Approves $418 Million Settlement That Will Change Real Estate Commissions
Home sellers will no longer be required to offer commission to a buyer’s agent when they sell their property, under an agreement with the National Association of Realtors.
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One Walk-in Shower Is as Good as Any Other, Right? Wrong.
Here’s how to make your morning shower more luxurious.
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Hey, New Yorkers: Do You Live Next to an Elevated Train Line?
Love or hate the elevated train right outside your window? Tell us about your experience.
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How Eight Feet Jolted A $180 Million Real Estate Deal
A landowner named Hezekiah Beers Pierrepont started selling plots of his Brooklyn land in the 1820s restricted by eight-foot setbacks still in effect today, rankling modern developers.
By Jeremy Lechtzin and
Co-op Assessments: Do You Have to Pay What They Say?
Courts allow co-op boards significant power over building finances, including assessments — if the fees are in ‘good faith.’
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‘No One Retires to California,’ They Thought. But Their Grandchildren Beckoned Them to the Bay Area.
After decades in Arizona, a couple relocated to the San Francisco Peninsula, where they hoped to find a single-level home with no stairs and plenty of room to host family.
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Can You Build a House Out of Paper? Shigeru Ban Says Yes.
A new version of the Pritzker Prize-winning architect’s Paper Log House is on display at the Glass House in New Canaan, Conn.
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Do Ground-Floor Co-op Apartments Really Have to Carpet Their Floors?
Carpeting rules are common. But housing laws protect residents with disabilities, to a point.
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I Hired an Agent to Sell My Home. Do I Have to Pay the Buyer’s Broker Now?
The legal settlements roiling the real estate industry are changing the way commissions get paid. But the change could come slowly.
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Can My Landlord Force Me to Use a Rent Guarantor?
A lease rental bond guarantee, which covers losses if a tenant fails to pay the rent, may seem unnecessary. But your landlord can require one.
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Do I Have to Allow the Landlord to Do Building Repairs in My Apartment?
The law permits landlords to make upgrades in rent-stabilized units, but that doesn’t mean your rent has to go up.
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Bernardsville, N.J.: A Gilded Age Enclave Looking to the Future
With grand estates and rolling meadows, this Somerset County borough has long attracted the wealthy. But now it’s courting younger, less affluent buyers.
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Ringwood, N.J.: A Rural Lifestyle 40 Miles From New York City
Residents say this northern Passaic County borough resembles the Catskills: “You’re in the country, and yet you’re not far from the city.”
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Brooklyn Heights: A Historic Waterfront Community Minutes From Manhattan
The neighborhood, known as New York’s first suburb, is a place where ‘people want to stay forever.’
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Medford, N.J.: A Rural Township With a Quaint Downtown
The Burlington County community often surprises new residents with its woodsy vibe: “It’s not at all what we thought of when we thought of New Jersey.”
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This week’s properties are a five-bedroom in New Canaan, Conn., and a four-bedroom in Chappaqua, N.Y.
By Alicia Napierkowski and Anne Mancuso
This week’s properties are on Sutton Place, in Hamilton Heights and Forest Hills.
By Heather Senison
A 1926 brick house in Lexington, a two-bedroom condominium in Lyme and a Tudor Revival home in Minneapolis.
By Angela Serratore
A three-bedroom home in La Jolla, a renovated retreat in Palm Springs and an Edwardian house in San Francisco.
By Angela Serratore
A three-bedroom houseboat, a duplex in a 19th-century brick building and a renovated townhouse with a roof terrace.
By Alison Gregor
David Saint, a theater director and a producer of the 2021 film version of “West Side Story,” is selling his duplex with a wraparound terrace in the East Village.
By Vivian Marino
This week’s properties are on the Upper West Side, in Gramercy Park and in Long Island City.
By Heather Senison
This week’s properties are a four-bedroom in Mount Kisco, N.Y., and a five-bedroom in Glen Ridge, N.J.
By Jill P. Capuzzo and Anne Mancuso
New research shows that the gap between income and home values has grown at an astounding rate over the past 50 years.
By T.M. Brown
A Tudor Revival cottage in Biltmore Forest, a ranch house and guesthouse in Boise and a 1991 home in Kent.
By Angela Serratore
A horticulture expert shares his must-read list.
By Margaret Roach
“We were pushing it,” the architect said of the design, which includes a hidden playroom and a soaking tub where you wouldn’t expect it.
By Tim McKeough
A woman with a young son started looking for a place before her lease expired, but even her most far-fetched solutions — Buy an RV? — haven’t panned out.
By Samantha Maldonado
A three-bedroom house in Calistoga, a Cape Cod-style home in Long Beach and a 1927 cottage in Mill Valley.
By Angela Serratore
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More hosts are fighting over guests, driving down prices and forcing the hosts to find creative ways to entice renters.
By Jill Terreri Ramos
Interior designer Jessica Schuster offers advice on how to set up a home bar.
By Tim McKeough
An artful display tells your guests you care about them — and it’s easier to create than you may think.
By Tim McKeough
The V.A. loan prohibits borrowers from paying commissions to real estate agents — a rule that could put veterans at a great disadvantage when buying a house.
By Debra Kamin
A two-level penthouse on the Athens Riviera, an industrial-flavored loft with Acropolis views, and a custom-built villa just south of central Athens.
By Michael Kaminer
This week’s properties on Central Park South, in West Chelsea and Riverdale.
By Heather Senison
This week’s properties are four-bedroom homes in Greenwich, Conn., and Port Washington, N.Y.
By Claudia Gryvatz Copquin and Alicia Napierkowski
After a decade in rentals, a couple hoped to strike the right balance for their first purchase on the north side of the city: ‘square footage versus access to coffee shops and restaurants.’ Here’s what they found.
By Carisa Crawford Chappell
If paying taxes every year makes you think about moving, consider the state and local tax burden, which varies from state to state.
By Michael Kolomatsky
A 1940 Colonial Revival home in Charles Town, an 1858 Greek Revival house in Holly Springs and a one-bedroom condominium in Washington.
By Angela Serratore
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You just have to follow a few simple rules. (Also, forget about going away for the weekend.)
By Margaret Roach
It took Doris Kearns Goodwin a while to adjust to leaving the Concord, Mass., farmhouse she shared with her husband. But Boston has its compensations.
By Joanne Kaufman
It has taken the historian a while to adjust to leaving the Concord, Mass., farmhouse she shared with her husband. But Boston has its compensations.
A Brooklyn hospital is trying to evict employees and retirees from staff housing, as it struggles financially, but tenants fear they will now be homeless in an unaffordable city.
By Anna Kodé
A 1929 Spanish-style house in Riverside, a two-bedroom condominium in Pasadena and a midcentury ranch house in Long Beach.
By Angela Serratore
A husband’s sudden death gave a widow time to reflect on the designs of their second homes and how to make one on her own.
By Matthew Daddona
On Friday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia made a ruling that opens the door for a renewed investigation into the National Association of Realtors.
By Debra Kamin
A sunny two-bedroom in Condesa, a condo for presale in Juarez, and a five-bedroom Spanish colonial house in Cuajimalpa De Morelos.
By Roxana Popescu
After a lifetime of seeking out tiny spaces, she finally found a keeper: a former barbershop in an old mill village in North Carolina.
By Julie Lasky
The pandemic upset a delicate balance of part-time and full-time residents in a community in the Poconos, sparking a debate over short-term rentals.
By Neda Toloui-Semnani
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Sales of luxury second homes increased in many U.S. markets last year. If you want to see some of the priciest, head to Rhode Island.
By Michael Kolomatsky
With life on the farm losing its appeal, a couple sought a small second home in the heart of New York’s cultural scene.
By Anna Fixsen
This week’s properties are four-bedroom homes in Mill Neck, N.Y., and Haddonfield, N.J.
By Claudia Gryvatz Copquin and Jill P. Capuzzo
This week’s properties are on Central Park West, in the financial district and in Park Slope.
By Heather Senison
A place outside the city might sound like heaven, but there are some things you should consider.
By Joanne Kaufman
Hiring a local to keep an eye on your weekend house can give you peace of mind and keep small problems from becoming big headaches.
By Joanne Kaufman
An imposing work of pottery can be as important to the design of a landscape as any well-placed plant. And no, we’re not talking about flower pots.
By Margaret Roach
A 19th-century farmhouse with a guesthouse in Leeds, an 1850 townhouse in Savannah and a 1927 home in Salt Lake City.
By Angela Serratore
Two saltbox houses on the island of Newfoundland, in Canada, were hard to resist. What would be harder still: Renovating them without road access.
By Tim McKeough
The craggy island had long held special appeal for one Canadian, who bought a pair of historic houses that had been on the market for years.
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A 1911 bungalow with a guesthouse in Los Angeles, a French Normandy-style home in Alameda and a four-bedroom retreat in Ukiah.
By Angela Serratore
Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem and one of its most well-known members have been ensnared in a seven-year saga, after a deacon hired to renovate another member’s house didn’t finish the job.
By Ronda Kaysen
Thirty years ago, a woman got a $250-a-month, rent-stabilized apartment in Inwood. She says the neighborhood has defined not only her life but her life’s work.
By D.W. Gibson
Some people belong to multiple private clubs that have emerged to fill physical and emotional voids. Others belong only to Sam’s Club.
By Anna Kodé
Private clubs have long shaped the fabric of New York social life. Many of them formed during the Gilded Age, meticulously designed to be showstoppers before Manhattan’s skyscrapers surrounded them. But in recent years, a new wave of clubs has proliferated, varying in price point, exclusivity and amenities.
By Karen Hanley, Anna Kodé and Ruru Kuo
March's top sales include the former home of George Malkemus.
By Vivian Marino
A one-bedroom apartment near the Trevi Fountain, a two-bedroom duplex on the western edge of town, and a spacious pied-à-terre across from the Basilica of Santa Cecilia.
By Lana Bortolot
During the Harlem Renaissance, some Black people hosted rent parties, celebrations with an undercurrent of desperation in the face of racism and discrimination.
By Debra Kamin
Looking to explore a new neighborhood in Manhattan and create a better work setup, a couple embarked on a search for a prewar two-bedroom.
By Joyce Cohen
This week’s properties are five-bedroom homes in Paramus, N.J., and Chappaqua, N.Y.
By Jill P. Capuzzo and Anne Mancuso
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This week’s properties are in Manhattan Valley, Hell’s Kitchen and St. George.
By Heather Senison
The estate of Maurice Kanbar, an entrepreneur, is selling his Upper East Side home. There is an art gallery on the first two floors and four vacant rental apartments upstairs.
By T.M. Brown
Real estate taxes on single-family homes increased about 24 percent from 2019 to 2023.
By Michael Kolomatsky
Six home sellers in Missouri successfully argued that the powerful real estate trade group’s rules on commissions forced them to pay inflated fees.
By Debra Kamin
After several lawsuits brought by home sellers, the rules around buying and selling properties are about to change.
By Karen Hanley, Debra Kamin and James Surdam
A converted 1840 schoolhouse in Phoenixville, a one-bedroom condominium in Portland and a two-story house in New Orleans.
By Angela Serratore
Your entryway has been working hard all winter. But it’s a new season: Time to lighten things up.
By Tim McKeough
You won’t stop at just one, once you discover what they can do for your garden: “People get obsessed.”
By Margaret Roach
Lawmakers say preservationists held too much power over decisions on whether buildings should be demolished and what should be allowed to replace them.
By Julia Echikson
Nathan Connolly and the estate of Shani Mott, who recently died, will receive a payment from their mortgage lender, which also agreed to several policy changes to discourage discrimination.
By Debra Kamin
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A two-bedroom condominium in San Francisco, a three-bedroom cottage in Los Angeles and a ranch house in San Luis Obispo.
By Angela Serratore
Economists and real estate experts warn that changes in how agents are paid could have unintended consequences for people buying their first homes.
By Ronda Kaysen and Rukmini Callimachi
Real estate experts say that getting a judgment is a lot easier than foreclosing on a major piece of real estate. And pinning a value to Trump’s buildings is a guessing game.
By Rukmini Callimachi
As long as this dog isn’t biting people, it’s probably not going anywhere. But that doesn’t necessarily mean you have to live with the noise.
By Jill Terreri Ramos
An A-frame lakefront chalet in La Minerve, a ski-in-ski-out condo in Mont-Tremblant, and a modern house in a development in the village of La Conception.
By Michael Kaminer
The art dealer has listed his West Village duplex, which he pieced together from three apartments, for $5.5 million. (And, yes, the contemporary art and furnishings are also for sale.)
By Vivian Marino
Customers raised $250,000 to save Boris & Horton from closure. Now its owners are negotiating with landlords and working to stay open with changes to their business model.
By Stefano Montali
Entire sections of this tiny New York City home can shift and change, depending on the time of day and what the occupants need.
By Tim McKeough
Unable to afford a single-family home near their jobs, a young family took a chance on a mobile-home park near the beach. Here’s what they found.
By Livia Albeck-Ripka
Most real estate agents in the city are not affiliated with the National Association of Realtors. Here’s how the group’s recent blockbuster settlement will affect buying and selling homes in New York City.
By Anna Kodé
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This week’s properties are a five-bedroom in Old Westbury, N.Y., and a three-bedroom in Riverside, Conn.
By Claudia Gryvatz Copquin and Alicia Napierkowski
This week’s properties are Lenox Hill, Yorkville and Holliswood.
By Heather Senison
Many U.S. homeowners are staying put rather than selling, even if they’d prefer to move. These days, renovating may be a better bet.
By Michael Kolomatsky
A three-bedroom condominium in an Edwardian house in San Francisco, a Craftsman bungalow in Tampa and an 1881 home in Providence.
By Angela Serratore
The architect of Bergen, in Boerum Hill, is Frida Escobedo, who recently landed the commission to redesign a wing of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
By Victoria M. Walker
New changes to the way homes are bought and sold are causing confusion among buyers, sellers and real estate agents. We want to hear your experience of selling a home in New York City in 2024.
By The New York Times
For one Brooklyn family, color was all-important. So was renovating on a budget.
By Tim McKeough
For one Brooklyn family, color was all-important. So was renovating on a budget.
A Victorian-style home in San Rafael, a ranch house in Santa Barbara and a Spanish-style home in Los Angeles.
By Angela Serratore
After renting their first New York apartment sight unseen, they decided to take a new place in the South Bronx with eyes wide open.
By Joyce Cohen
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One quarter of residents in the French capital live in government-owned housing, part of an aggressive plan to keep lower-income Parisians — and their businesses — in the city.
By Thomas Fuller
The National Association of Realtors has agreed to change its policies to settle several lawsuits brought by home sellers — a move that could reduce commissions.
By Rukmini Callimachi and Debra Kamin
The National Association of Realtors will pay $418 million in damages and will amend several rules that housing experts say will drive down housing costs.
By Debra Kamin
The influential National Association of Realtors agreed to make several changes to its policies to settle class-action lawsuits brought by home sellers who say they were forced to pay inflated commissions to real estate agents.
By Debra Kamin
Interior designer Jeremiah Brent offers guidance on how to style bookshelves.
By Tim McKeough
Jeremiah Brent, the newest cast member of Netflix’s “Queer Eye,” shows how he styles the shelves in the home he shares with his husband, Nate Berkus.
By Tim McKeough
An industrial loft in La Villette, a former workshop in Sainte-Avoye and an updated apartment with 19th-century touches on Île Saint-Louis.
By Alison Gregor
A 108-block sidewalk restoration project led by the Central Park Conservancy balances historical aesthetics with modern needs.
By Anna Kodé and Maansi Srivastava
With a new job at Bryn Mawr and a grandchild on the way, an academic looked for the things she couldn’t afford in Manhattan: more space, more green, more parking.
By T.M. Brown
More than a third of U.S. homeowners plan to stay in their homes forever, according to a new survey.
By Michael Kolomatsky
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This week’s properties are in Morningside Heights, Murray Hill and Williamsburg.
By Heather Senison
This week’s properties are a six-bedroom in Chatham, N.J., and a five-bedroom in Scarsdale, N.Y.
By Jill P. Capuzzo and Alicia Napierkowski
An A-frame cabin in Greene County, a renovated bungalow in Columbus and a 1911 home outside Philadelphia.
By Angela Serratore
When the writer built a dream home for his family, he forgot to include one important thing: a place to write. So he found an unconventional solution.
By Steven Kurutz
When the writer built a dream home for his family, he forgot to include one important thing: a place to write. So he found an unconventional solution.
A three-bedroom house in Glendale, a Craftsman bungalow in San Francisco and a two-bedroom condominium in a gated retirement community in Carmel.
By Angela Serratore
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