After Surfside, questions around commercial buildings and business model of condo associations are brought to forefront
The June 24 tragedy that left nearly 100 dead after a condo building collapsed in Surfside, Florida, has prompted swift review of condo-building reviews, talk of new legislation and more questions than answers.Original Article


The property last sold in 2020 and ranked among Tampa Bay's highest-priced home sales for the year.
The South and West were big winners when it came to new housing. Here's who gained and lost, according to the just-released Census data.
The decade-long nationwide housing boom has allowed low-income areas keep pace with nationwide home trends, though home prices in these areas are still below the national median.
Little inventory, record-high home prices, deep-pocketed investors and not enough new construction may be pushing some buyers to leave the housing market.
Gateway markets in New York and California, unsurprisingly, saw the biggest out-migration last year, during the height of the Covid-19 pandemic. So which areas gained?
All 100 units will be 427-square-foot studio apartments.
The Covid-19 pandemic ushered in a wave of buyers in the second-home market, fueled by low interest rates, the ability to work remotely and, for employed workers, more discretionary income during stay-at-home mandates. Here's how the market is trending now.
Tampa Bay foreclosure filings are much higher than national levels year-over-year.
Yet another property on Davis Islands has crossed the $1,000 per square foot pricing threshold.