Washington D.C. Real Estate Veteran Donna Evers Joins TTR Sotheby’s International Realty – PRWeb
Washington D.C. real estate veteran Donna Evers joins TTR Sotheby’s International Realty, enhancing her legacy with a prestigious brand. Discover the impact!
How Trump could transform D.C. real estate, from downtown to design – The Washington Post
Explore how Trump’s influence could reshape Washington, D.C.’s real estate landscape, stirring debates on design, gentrification, and community impact.
Washington, D.C. Housing Inventory Jumps Record 25% Amid Federal Layoffs – Business Wire
D.C. housing inventory surges 25% as federal layoffs ripple through lives and markets — a clear-eyed guide for buyers, sellers, renters, and policymakers. Read.
Shutdown Adds to the D.C. Housing Market’s Challenges – wsj.com
Shutdown deepens D.C.’s housing crisis: furloughs, stalled closings and rising evictions worsen inequality and daily precarity for renters and owners.
Douglas Development blames accounting snafu for D.C. property loan delinquency – The Business Journals
Roxane Gay–style probe: Douglas Development calls an ‘accounting snafu’ for a D.C. loan delinquency—ask what was hidden, who pays, and how trust is rebuilt. Now
WMATA Selects Developers To Build Next To Deanwood Metro Station – Bisnow
WMATA picked developers for Deanwood station—a decision about housing, transit and who belongs. Read about the stakes, equity, and community power. Be vigilant.
D.C. needs housing. Why has it taken 25 years to build on this parking lot? – The Washington Post
A clear, furious look at why a D.C. parking lot sat for 25 years: zoning, politics, money and power blocking homes while people were priced out. Read solutions.
A New Economic Report Paints a Concerning Picture of the DMV’s Future – Washingtonian
Sharp, candid take on a new economic report warning the DMV’s future: slowing growth rising inequality housing strain, transit woes, mounting climate costs now.
10 major real estate projects reshaping D.C.’s landscape – The Business Journals
Ten major projects are remaking D.C.’s waterfronts, parks and skyline — razor-sharp changes that reshape who belongs, who profits, and what neighborhoods become.
Uptick in homes for sale in D.C. region driven by retiring federal workers – The Business Journals
Retiring federal workers are swelling D.C. listings, easing bidding wars and reshaping neighborhoods — a blunt, humane take for buyers sellers and policymakers.