Oklahoma Stakes Its Claim to the Tallest Building in the U.S.
The Oklahoma City Council voted this week to clear the way for a 1,907-foot tower, surpassing One World Trade Center in New York.
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The Oklahoma City Council voted this week to clear the way for a 1,907-foot tower, surpassing One World Trade Center in New York.
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After six years in the United Arab Emirates’ most populous city, a public-relations pro decided to put down roots and invest long-term. Here’s what she found.
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You may think you know how to make your bed — but here’s how to make it a lot better.
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The WeWork founder is selling his marquee New York City apartment, a four-bedroom aerie that overlooks Gramercy Park.
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Where Should You Raise Your Children?
A new study ranked 180 U.S. cities for parenting based on relevant data.
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$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.
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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.
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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.
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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
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.
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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.
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Squeezed by high interest rates and record prices, homeowners are frozen in place. They can’t sell. So first-time buyers can’t buy.
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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.
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$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.
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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.
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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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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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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.
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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?
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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 on the Upper West Side, Roosevelt Island and in St. George.
By Heather Senison
This week’s properties are a four-bedroom in Norwalk, Conn., and a five-bedroom in White Plains, N.Y.
By Alicia Napierkowski and Anne Mancuso
A three-bedroom condominium in a converted Gothic Revival church in New Haven, an 1873 rowhouse in Lambertville and a 1938 bungalow in Atlanta.
By Angela Serratore
May's top listings included Drew Barrymore's estate in the Hamptons.
By Vivian Marino
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
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
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 Anna Kodé
Instead of a conventional renovation, one New Yorker took a progressive approach. Now he pays almost nothing for energy, and the air is always fresh.
By Julie Lasky
There are laws to protect people from discrimination in buying, renting and living in their homes.
By Debra Kamin
After years of living in employer-provided housing, a retired pastor decided to put down roots in Peoria, Ill. Could she afford the single-story, three-bedroom house she wanted?
By Mitch Smith
Inventory has grown over the past year, though prices continue to rise as well — just not as fast.
By Michael Kolomatsky
This week’s properties are a four-bedroom in Glen Cove, N.Y., and a five-bedroom in Jersey City, N.J.
By Claudia Gryvatz Copquin and Jill P. Capuzzo
This week’s properties on the Upper East Side, in Chelsea and Kew Gardens.
By Heather Senison
A 1766 Dutch farmhouse in Claverack, a two-bedroom condominium in a loft building in Boston and a 1912 Colonial Revival home in Philadelphia.
By Angela Serratore
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The author of “The Heirloom Gardener” offers tips for growing a garden of lush perennials you can put in a soup or add to a salad.
By Margaret Roach
The house in Winnetka, Ill., where Kevin McCallister battled two hapless burglars in the 1990 film is on the market for the first time in more than a decade. List price: $5.25 million.
By Jenny Gross
A hands-on renovation during the early part of the pandemic produced a place to call home that doubles as a home office.
By Tim McKeough
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
Accommodations for shareholders are required by law, and your building needs to take action.
By Jill Terreri Ramos
Judith Sheindlin and her husband’s Manhattan penthouse at 14 Sutton Place South is for sale for the first time in a decade.
By Vivian Marino
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
An architectural firm waited years to design for clients who wanted a modern look in the Hamptons — it uses the sky, the ocean and dunes as muses.
By Craig Kellogg and Ashok Sinha
The French-born, California-based owner of a fashion brand wanted a house that could accommodate visits from her three sons and also serve as a rental property.
By Debra Kamin
This week’s properties are a five-bedroom in Upper Saddle River, N.J., and a four-bedroom in Bronxville, N.Y.
By Jill P. Capuzzo and Anne Mancuso
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This week’s properties are in Yorkville, Kips Bay and Park Slope.
By Heather Senison
Prices, sales and available homes have all increased during the year, largely driven by high-end properties. But condo prices are sagging.
By Michael Kolomatsky
Here’s how to share shots and footage with The New York Times for a story featuring those who live near overhead trains in New York City.
By Anna Kodé
How well do you know your own backyard? Noah Charney thinks you should take another look.
By Margaret Roach
An 1880 Queen Anne Revival home in Durham, a two-bedroom condominium in Palm Beach and a modern farmhouse with a detached studio in Barrington.
By Angela Serratore
On the reality TV show, a motley crew of camera-ready real estate agents navigates the cutthroat market of multimillion dollar houses.
By Debra Kamin
When Donna Lennard bought the house, ‘it was an adorable cottage’ surrounded by water. Now it’s even better.
By Tim McKeough
Here’s how to make the most of an outdoor space in the city — even if it’s small, awkwardly shaped or hemmed in by other buildings.
By Tim McKeough
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
A man who struggled to find housing in East Hampton has turned his experience into a podcast, and many of his guests are ‘navigating the waters of trying to make a living here.’
By D.W. Gibson
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Susan Kaufman, whose editing career included stints at Condé Nast and People, turned her lifelong love of the Long Island towns into a coffee-table book.
By Debra Kamin
State law currently allows co-ops to charge up to 8 percent of the monthly cost as a late fee. But there are exceptions.
By Jill Terreri Ramos
The annual Don’t Move, Improve! Awards showcase exceptional innovation and creativity in home improvements across London.
By Joann Plockova
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
The building, at 496 Broome Street, was the first home in New York City that the couple owned and is now listed by Sean Ono Lennon and his mother for $5.5 million.
By Vivian Marino
The renovation that followed turned his backyard into an upscale version of a campground — complete with a marble shower in the trees.
By Tim McKeough
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