Stories Tagged as
Housing
Students live alongside seniors at this Minnesota residential facility
May 20, 2024
At the Watkins Manor assisted living facility, eight students live and volunteer with 45 senior residents.
Primary home stock gets a boost as demand for second homes drops
May 13, 2024
Softer demand for second homes has led to greater inventory in some markets, but overall, the climate is still competitive for buyers.
From the 1920s to the 2020s, cash-strapped homebuyers turn to smaller homes
May 13, 2024
Home builders are making new homes smaller to keep prices down. In Southern California, where land is scarce and housing is expensive, buyers are turning to small pre-war homes or ADUs.
How a new house turned into a "starter, middle, and ending" home for this Texas woman
by
Sarah Leeson
May 10, 2024
"I'm just attached to it because it's taken care of me and I'm taking care of it," said Violet O'Brien on why she's choosing to age in place in her Houston home.
U.S. rents have grown faster than wages for the past 5 years
May 8, 2024
Rent growth is slower in some places, but much faster in others. We're looking at you, New York City.
For retirees, homeownership may not be the asset it used to be
by
Amy Scott
and Sarah Leeson
May 7, 2024
Paula Span of The New York Times says that these days, aging in place might feel more like being stuck in place .
Homeownership in the The Sims meets homeownership IRL
by
Sean McHenry
Apr 29, 2024
"The Sims had really kind of seeded that desire for homeownership in me at a young age," said Elle Hunt, a journalist based in the U.K. "And I'd spent the interim 20 years walking away from that dream a bit."
For public good, not for profit.
SCOTUS weighs policy on policing homeless people amid a national housing shortage
by
Amy Scott
and Sarah Leeson
Apr 22, 2024
The justices will debate if enforcing a public camping ban in Grants Pass, Oregon, violated the Eighth Amendment.
Cash for your backyard? Companies, homeowners try to capitalize on a California law.
Apr 22, 2024
Housing shortage-plagued California recently started allowing property owners to split their lots and have developers build new homes there.
Why it's gotten more expensive to house people experiencing homelessness
by
Matt Levin
Apr 22, 2024
Higher interest rates and insurance costs make building low-income and supportive housing more costly — especially in California, home to 28% of the U.S. homeless population.