First, what constitutes the Luxury Market? Luxury real estate across the United States typically encompasses real property with an appraised value of more than $1 million dollars. Of course, a “luxury” classification also varies according to location …
When land is worth more than improvements made on it, the house becomes at risk, especially for high–end properties, said real estate appraiser Don Saba. But the transaction that perhaps mimics the Viniks the most occurred a decade ago. Pharmaceutical …
Sales of Omaha-area homes priced over $1 million have bounced back since the housing slowdown, but that doesn't mean real estate agents don't still go the distance to lure in the Daddy Warbucks types. A creative touch is especially helpful, perhaps a …
But a reasonable “tapas”-size portion of the Moroccan date-and-orange salad revived her, and by the end, she was a willing participant in my saffron-laced fig pudding. We sat, full and happy, in the room's buzz of … But cheap real estate makes it …
Failing marriages, high-achieving kids and kitchen renovations were just as likely to be topics of discussion as the nuances of “Daniel Deronda.” … Last winter, a particularly ugly encounter about whether we could deviate from our practice of …
Before they were off — he to check on Disney Vacation Club membership and she to Senses, the resort's full-service spa — they inquired about real estate in coastal Brevard County. "We like Disney World so much that we want to move closer, and the …
Published: September 20, 2013. The next generation of a prominent New York real estate family business, Glenwood Management, has taken up the mantle at the company and begun its first condominium project. … While other Manhattan property developers …
Style · Travel · Jobs · Real Estate · Autos … During the past year, two key employees resigned; additionally, the company's general counsel, Christopher A. Marinello, who has been as much a public face of the company as Mr. Radcliffe, says he is …
… Trust threw a party for the landmark Thursday at the W Hotel. Among those attending was Los Angeles City Councilman Tom LaBonge. The sign was built in 1923 to tout high–end real estate development. Its 45-foot-tall letters originally read …