Posts

Philadelphia New-Build Buyer Finds 100 Defects

Image
How Common Are Defects in Philadelphia New-Builds? Often, defects in Philadelphia new-builds appear less like isolated mishaps and more like a recurring market pattern. Philadelphia reporting found more than 650 homeowners in the region with serious water damage in homes purchased over two decades. Those homes came from 27 different builders, suggesting the problem reaches across companies rather than reflecting a single outlier. Similar scrutiny in housing markets elsewhere has also centered on predatory contracts and broader calls for stronger consumer protections. WHYY also reported more than 20 Streamline buyers around Philadelphia experienced defects, largely involving water infiltration. Philadelphia homeowners next to new construction have also reported structural damage from excavation, underpinning, and demolition tied to adjacent projects. Signals for Buyers For buyers, these figures can reshape expectations about the likelihood of post-closing problems in newer homes. They...

San Francisco Church Condo Lists for $6.8M

Image
What to Know About The Light House Across from Dolores Park, The Light House has emerged as one of San Francisco’s most closely watched church-to-condo conversions. It places a luxury residence inside the former Second Church of Christ, Scientist in the Mission Dolores neighborhood. The project occupies a historic 1915 or 1916 structure linked to architect William H. Crim. Various reports describe the building as either Neoclassical or Beaux-Arts. The building was officially condemned in 2006 before a local seismic engineer purchased and restored the historic church into condos. Broader real estate conversations around properties like this often touch on tenant protection laws and how policy changes can affect investor confidence. Its identity is shaped by large arched windows, oak paneling, marble floors, carved wood doors, and carefully preserved church details. The Light House contains four condo units. It has also been associated with both 93 Cumberland Street and 651 Dolores Str...

Dallas Office Sale and Big Lease Signal CRE Pulse

Image
Dallas Office Market Posted Positive Absorption In Dallas-Fort Worth, office net absorption remained positive through 2025 and into the first quarter of 2026. That signaled a measurable, if uneven, recovery in market demand. JLL logged 332,300 square feet of positive absorption in Q1 2026. Multiple firms had also reported gains across 2025. Earlier, D CEO cited 272,890 square feet in Q1 2025. It was the first positive quarter in 10 periods. Later reports showed stronger market momentum. That included 661,782 square feet in Q3 2025 and 1.3 million square feet for the year. At the same time, the region’s data center expansion added another layer of commercial real estate demand across Dallas-Fort Worth. Positive absorption helped trim vacancy and availability from prior peaks. JLL placed vacancy at 24.5% in Q1 2026. Avison Young also reported that vacancy held steady at 24.9% in Q1 2026. Other firms also showed improvement during 2025. The rebound reflected a shifting tenant mix, with ...

United States Delistings Hit Pandemic-Speed Alarm

Image
Why Delistings Are Rising Now Mounting affordability pressure is pushing more U.S. home sellers to pull listings from the market rather than continue waiting for buyers who are increasingly constrained by high mortgage rates and elevated prices. Weak demand is central to the shift. With mortgage rates near 6.2% in late 2025, monthly payments remain difficult for many households. This is shrinking the qualified buyer pool and slowing sales activity. Inventory was about 15% higher than a year earlier, adding to the pressure from rising supply . About 70% of active listings in September had sat for at least 60 days. That shows how often homes are going stale. Similar uncertainty is showing up in markets facing cooling price rises and rising investor caution. Seller Psychology Under Strain This prolonged standstill is intensifying mortgage fatigue and reshaping seller psychology. Many owners resist price cuts because lower offers clash with expectations. They also make a sale feel unneces...

La Jolla Seuss Home Sells, Trophy Shock

Image
How Much the La Jolla Seuss Home Sold For Price became the central issue as the La Jolla Seuss home entered the 2026 sales cycle at $9.95 million, just under $10 million, for the 1.51-acre parcel at 7301 Encelia Dr. That asking figure applied to the residence and land as a final parcel, not the earlier four-parcel compound. Final Price Structure The 2026 marketing narrowed the offering to the 5,004-square-foot, four-bedroom, four-bath house on 1.51 acres. The sale also carried preservation limits because the historic observation tower and office cannot be altered in future renovations. Reports tied the process to sealed bidding, with offers due by April 15. Earlier coverage had framed the home at $11.995 million within a broader $18.995 million estate package. That prior effort did not close. UC San Diego, the owner, used its real estate process for the sale. Proceeds were designated for the Geisel Fund at the UC San Diego Foundation. Why the La Jolla Seuss Home Was So Valuable Beyond...

Seattle Once-Affordable Area Faces Price Shock

Image
Why Seattle Homes Are Still Unaffordable Across Seattle, housing costs remain out of reach because supply is still far too limited for the level of demand pressing on the market. Inventory has hovered near 1.4 months, far below the roughly six months associated with balance. That shortage lets sellers command more as buyers compete for few listings. Lot scarcity also raises land costs, especially in desirable neighborhoods. Seattle’s location between Puget Sound and Lake Washington creates geographic limits that restrict outward expansion. Demand Keeps Pressure High A strong regional economy, led in part by Amazon and Microsoft, continues drawing well-paid workers and new households. Population growth has outpaced construction, while the city’s amenities sustain buyer interest even during slower periods. Even with inventory growth in Seattle, supply remains well below the level typically needed to meaningfully improve affordability. Rules Still Constrain Growth Historic single-family...

New Jersey $405 Rental Lottery Opens 45 Homes

Image
What Is the NJ $405 Rental Lottery? Behind the label, the so-called NJ $405 Rental Lottery refers to New Jersey’s State Rental Assistance Program, or SRAP, pre-application lottery process rather than a separate housing program. Administered by the New Jersey Department of Community Affairs, SRAP is a state-funded rental subsidy tied to housing within New Jersey. The lottery does not provide immediate housing. It places selected pre-applicants onto an SRAP waiting list after a limited online enrollment period. Only 4,000 applications will be accepted through the lottery and added to the waitlist. Applicants file through the state’s WaitlistCheck portal during an announced window. Selection is made by lottery, not by who applies first. Some local governments are also expanding affordable housing support through tools like a Community Housing Fund backed by a 0.5% real estate transfer tax. This corrects common application myths and helps people understand how the process actually works....