#rental-market-trends

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fromSFGATE
6 days ago

SF and Austin rents are almost exactly the same as they were in 2020

The supply side factor is, I would say, by far the biggest difference between San Francisco and Austin. Austin is just building a ton, and really, I would say setting kind of a good example for growing in a way that actually meets increasing demand.
San Francisco
fromtherealdeal.com
1 week ago

Manhattan racks up ultra-rich renters

Earlier this week, former Howard Hughes CEO David Weinreb agreed to rent his West Chelsea penthouse for $177,500 a month, an eye-popping figure that followed a $95,000-a-month lease at a Naftali Group building on the Upper East Side in December. Data on trophy rentals is tough to pin down, but this is likely among the most expensive leases ever inked in New York City. The two hefty leases came as inventory for Manhattan's trophy rentals—which appraiser Jonathan Miller defines as the top 1 percent of the market, with rates starting at $25,000 a month—was down more than 40 percent year-over-year in January, as new leases climbed (albeit, at a more modest pace).
Real estate
#brooklyn-rentals
fromNew York Post
2 weeks ago
Real estate

Brooklyn developers flooding 7 neighborhoods with new rentals - as many locals remain priced out of homeownership

fromNew York Post
2 weeks ago
Real estate

Brooklyn developers flooding 7 neighborhoods with new rentals - as many locals remain priced out of homeownership

Real estate
fromFast Company
1 month ago

Uber's founder wants to disrupt your apartment

Sekra will blend hospitality and proptech to build upscale, community-focused rental apartments that increase efficiency, reduce vacancies, and command premium rents.
Real estate
fromFortune
5 months ago

The housing market has gotten so bleak that even millionaires are renting right now | Fortune

Millionaire renters in the U.S. tripled from 4,500 in 2019 to 13,692 in 2023, reflecting wealthy preference for renting over buying.
#community-building
fromNew York Post
10 months ago
NYC real estate

This NYC apartment building is paying its residents to party together

Brooklyn Crossing encourages tenants to host events to foster community, emphasizing that social amenities are as vital as physical ones.
fromNew York Post
10 months ago
NYC real estate

This NYC apartment building is paying its residents to party together

Luxury apartment buildings are now incentivizing community building among tenants to meet the demand for social connection.
NYC real estate
fromNew York Post
10 months ago

This NYC apartment building is paying its residents to party together

Luxury apartment buildings are now incentivizing community building among tenants to meet the demand for social connection.
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