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Real Estate

Highlights

  1. Where Should You Raise Your Children?

    A new study ranked 180 U.S. cities for parenting based on relevant data.

     By

    Credit
    Calculator
  2. $950,000 Homes in Bordeaux, France

    Two apartments and a single-family villa in and around the port city on the river Garonne, in southwestern France.

     By

    CreditMy French House
    What you Get
  3. Wendell Pierce Claims Discrimination in Trying to Rent a Harlem Apartment

    The renowned character actor, best known for playing Detective Bunk Moreland on HBO’s “The Wire,” says a white landlord rejected his rental application.

     By

    The actor Wendell Pierce railed against racial discrimination in a series of posts on X on Monday and Tuesday.
    CreditMonica Schipper/Getty Images
  4. Ford Rescues a Detroit Train Station as It Plots Its Own Future

    The automaker paid $90 million for the ravaged Michigan Central Station in 2018, and will spend millions more to create a hub of businesses focused on transportation.

     By

    The Ford Motor Company has spent hundreds of millions of dollars restoring the Michigan Central Station in Detroit, a project that included replacing or refurbishing 102,000 square feet of windows.
    CreditSylvia Jarrus for The New York Times
  5. Feud Erupts Over the Prospect of a New Hamptons Nightclub

    Scott Sartiano proposed bringing his Manhattan-based members-only hot spot, Zero Bond, to a historic village inn. Local residents are not rolling out the red carpet.

     By Jacob Bernstein and

    Almost anyone who goes to the Hamptons can tell you that it long ago shed its reputation as a quiet getaway. (Above, the Surf Lodge, in Montauk, N.Y.)
    CreditAdriel Reboh/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images
  1. Your Chance to Snoop: It’s ‘Open Days’ Season in the Garden

    This year, more than 360 private gardens across the country are opening to visitors. Don’t miss your chance to learn from some of the best.

     By

    One of “the marquee gardens” welcoming the public during the Garden Conservancy Open Days belongs to the interior designer Bunny Williams, in Falls Village, Conn.
    CreditCourtesy of Bunny Williams
    in the garden
  2. The Make-or-Break Question for a New Roommate: Do You Drink?

    A Brooklyn woman who has been sober for three years needed a roommate. But alcohol would not be allowed in the apartment. Some people thought that was a joke.

     By

    Shelby Cohen now calls Jersey City, N.J., home, though she still maintains an active social life in Brooklyn.
    CreditJames Estrin/The New York Times
    renters
  3. Stuck in a Starter Home

    Squeezed by high interest rates and record prices, homeowners are frozen in place. They can’t sell. So first-time buyers can’t buy.

     By

    Chris and Alison Wentland’s children share a small bedroom in Chicago. Trading up to a home with one extra room has proved elusive in their neighborhood.
    CreditMichelle Litvin for The New York Times
  4. She Made an Offer on a Condo. Then the Seller Learned She Was Black.

    A Black woman claims a white homeowner tried to pull out of a sale because of her race.

     By

    Dr. Raven Baxter, a molecular biologist, was in escrow on a new home when she was told the seller didn’t want to hand over the keys to a Black person.
    CreditErin Schaff/The New York Times
  5. $1.9 Million Homes in California

    A midcentury retreat in Palm Springs, a 2021 townhouse in West Hollywood and a 1912 Craftsman bungalow in San Diego.

     By

    CreditDaniel Dahler for Sotheby’s International Realty
    What You Get

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Ask Real Estate

More in Ask Real Estate ›
  1. When Your Neighbor Renovates, How Do You Protect Your Home?

    A law exists to balance the interests of people who renovate their properties with the interests of their neighbors.

     By

    CreditNadia Pillon
  2. 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.’

     By

    CreditNadia Pillon
  3. 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.

     By

    CreditNadia Pillon
  4. My Neighbor Has a Very Annoying Emotional Support Dog. What Can I Do?

    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

    CreditNadia Pillon
  5. Security Deposits: Your Landlord May Owe You More Than You Think

    Landlords are required to put security deposits in interest-bearing bank accounts. How much of that interest goes to you?

     By

    CreditNadia Pillon

Living In

More in Living In ›
  1. 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.

     By

    CreditJennifer Pottheiser for The New York Times
  2. 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.”

     By

    CreditLaura Moss for The New York Times
  3. 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.’

     By

    The Manhattan skyline and the rejuvenated piers of Brooklyn Bridge Park can be seen from the Brooklyn Heights Promenade.
    CreditJanice Chung for The New York Times
  4. 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.”

     By

    CreditHannah Beier for The New York Times

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  5. What you Get

    $2 Million Homes in Buenos Aires

    A three-bedroom apartment in a modern tower, a duplex with a rooftop soccer pitch, and an 1898 mansion configured as a hotel.

    By Michael Kaminer

     
  6. TimesVideo

    Searching for New York’s Hidden Public Art

    In a city that’s constantly changing, remnants of old public artworks can be spotted between towers and in traffic triangles. You just have to look for them.

    By Gabriel Blanco, Karen Hanley, Dave Horn and Anna Kodé

     
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  9. What Is Fair Housing?

    There are laws to protect people from discrimination in buying, renting and living in their homes.

    By Debra Kamin

     
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  19. What You Get

    $5 Million Homes in California

    A four-bedroom house with a detached studio in Los Angeles, a 1907 Mediterranean-style home in San Francisco and a French Country-style retreat in Sonoma.

    By Angela Serratore

     
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  22. What you Get

    $750,000 Homes in Barbados

    A colonial-style townhouse, a four-bedroom house with a turret and koi pond, and a one-bedroom condominium in a beachfront midrise.

    By Alison Gregor

     
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  35. What You Get

    $1.5 Million Homes in California

    A Spanish-style house in Los Angeles, a Craftsman bungalow with a guest apartment in Sacramento and a two-bedroom home with a guesthouse in San Diego.

    By Angela Serratore

     
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  41. What you Get

    $700,000 Homes in Barcelona

    Two renovated apartments in the Gothic Quarter, and a one-bedroom unit in a historic building in the Dreta de l’Eixample.

    By Marcelle Sussman Fischler

     
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