After a solid 12-year career in the NBA, current CBS basketball analyst Wally Szczerbiak won’t require a hoop to pull off one of his biggest slam-dunks ever. The former baller has listed his 5.44-acre property in the historic Cold Spring Harbor area of Long Island for $13.8 million. He purchased the stunning home for $4.35 million in 2000, when he was picked in the first round of the NBA Draft by the Minnesota Timberwolves. Talk about a prudent rookie investment! Built in 1910, the mansion was purchased in 1933 by J.P. Morgan as a wedding gift for his daughter. The Colonial-style mansion is surrounded by other multimillion-dollar estates on the southern tip of Oyster Bay. The list of features and amenities inside the four-story, eight-bedroom mansion is long. There’s a conservatory, live-in kitchen, study, man loft, bar, and home theater. A saltwater pool and a private dock are just two of the many outdoor features. According to the listing agent, the mansion is in pristine condition and comes with beach and docking rights. Szczerbiak played 12 seasons for four teams in the NBA—Minnesota, Boston, Seattle, and Cleveland. Known as a perimeter shooter, Szczerbiak averaged 14 points per game in his career. He made the All-Rookie Team in 2000 and his lone All-Star squad two seasons later. The post Former NBA All-Star Wally Szczerbiak Lists Historic Long Island Mansion appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®. via http://www.realtor.com/news/celebrity-real-estate/wally-szczerbiak-selling-long-island-mansion/
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Independence Day is a time to celebrate what makes this country great. Still, if you’re thinking of hosting a July Fourth bash, make sure you take some precautions. “Remember when Janice lit the lawn on fire?” is probably not how you want your friends to remember your party. Like the other holiday fails we’ve highlighted in the past, July Fourth offers lots of opportunities to bake, craft, and celebrate in theme. Unfortunately it also serves up myriad chances to disturb the peace, destroy property, and unexpectedly send loved ones to the ER. It’s true we all make mistakes. Hey, we’re American, we own up to our blunders! So in the spirit of unity, let’s walk through some of them. Because seeking entertainment in the fails of others is OK as long as we can learn something, right? Lesson No. 1: Don’t light fireworks around parked carsWe feel like this should go without saying, but as the clip below illustrates, you should never light fireworks on a street where your party guests or neighbors will park their cars. Unless, of course, your goal is to set off every car alarm and make everyone’s head spin. In that case, mission accomplished!
——-- Lesson No. 2: Practice makes perfectThese geniuses were thisclose to nailing it. Unfortunately, writing in sparklers requires some forethought, primarily the understanding that you’ll need to write the letters backward if you expect them to look right to your audience. A simple trial run spelling out “USA” will produce a photo that actually makes sense. Winging it like these guys? Not so much. ——-- Lesson No. 3: Don’t bite off more than you can chewIf your baking skills are subpar, don’t think you’ll magically be able to pull off a Martha Stewart–style cake the day before your big party. We all have our strengths; know yours. Sometimes, just going to the store and buying dessert makes more sense. ——-- Lesson No. 4: Don’t forget that Hawaii and Alaska are part of our country, tooPoor Alaska and Hawaii! Whoever designed the packaging for this ice cube tray of the contiguous United States wasn’t on their A-game when they decided to tout “50 ways to chill.”
——-- Lesson No. 5: A regular Jell-O shot will do just fineI have been to a couple of July Fourth parties where red and blue Jell-O shots were served in small plastic cups. I’ve even consumed Jell-O shots out of the halves of hollowed-out lemons. Those were impressive. This watermelon concoction? Not so much. Don’t waste a bottle of vodka on this messy cry for help. ——-- Lesson No. 6: Don’t feel bad if no one touches your yogurt saladThis was such a valiant attempt at a salad that’s intrinsically messy. But does a yogurt salad (or any dairy-filled salad, for that matter) ever look appetizing on a hot July day? Consider focusing your efforts on a crowd-pleasing bowl of guacamole instead. The post 6 Epic July Fourth Party Fails That’ll Make You Proud to Be An American appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®. via http://www.realtor.com/news/trends/july-fourth-party-fails/ U.S. Rep. Charlie Crist has put his condominium in St. Petersburg, FL, on the market for $1.5 million. Crist had shared the home with his wife of eight years, Carole. Crist filed for divorce in February. The three-bedroom, 3.5-bathroom condo measures 2,736 square feet and is located in downtown St. Petersburg. “It’s right smack in the middle of all the activity going on in St. Petersburg,” says listing agent Rhonda Sanderford of Yes-Homes. “You [can] walk to the movies, you walk to the grocery store, you walk to do your shopping. Then you have all the parks.” And depending on whom you ask, the city offers one of the best waterfronts in the country. Located on the seventh floor of the Parkshore Plaza building, the condo’s amenities include a private elevator, combination living and dining room, kitchen with balcony, and master suite with balcony. Building amenities include a swimming pool, heated spa, and gym. When the couple moved in, they installed birch wood floors and furnished it to Crist’s taste. “His furnishings are very traditional,” says Sanderford. “And when you couple that with the coastal wood floors, it gives you that very traditional look. Some are beautiful antiques that have been passed down from his family.” Crist served as the 44th governor of Florida, from 2007 to 2011, during which time he switched his party affiliation from Republican to Democrat. He ran for the U.S. Senate in 2010 as a Republican, but lost to Marco Rubio. In 2016, Crist was elected as a Democrat to the U.S. House of Representatives from Florida’s 13th Congressional District. Sanderford says Crist is currently renting an apartment in Washington, DC. The post U.S. Rep. Charlie Crist Selling Classic $1.5M Condo in St. Petersburg appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®. via http://www.realtor.com/news/celebrity-real-estate/charlie-crist-condo-sale/ The list of celebrities who have passed through Mag Black’s Los Angeles home is classic Hollywood: Frank Sinatra, Mia Farrow, Audrey Hepburn, Eva Gabor. But when the 7,000-square-foot, Georgian Colonial-style home listed this month for almost $14 million, one star took center stage: Paul Revere Williams, the architect. “I didn’t know a thing about him, but everyone ooh’d and ahh’d when they heard this was a Paul Williams,” says Ms. Black, who recently relisted her home for $13.95 million, an 8% increase, partly due to the growing strength of the Williams pedigree. The late Mr. Williams, whose career spanned five decades and an array of architectural styles, is back in vogue—and not just with the Tinseltown set. The first African-American to be admitted to the American Institute of Architects in 1923, Mr. Williams has long been revered in the city’s affluent pockets for his willingness to put the client before convention, and for his attention to detail. (His biographer said she can identify a bona fide Williams by the gentle rise of the staircase.) Now a number of posthumous honors, including an AIA Gold Medal in December, which is shared by the likes of Frank Lloyd Wright and Le Corbusier, have shined a brighter spotlight on the architect’s work. Agents say that renewed name-recognition can translate to a premium for home sellers. In June there were six Williams-designed homes publicly listed for sale, ranging from a $2.4 million auction for a Mediterranean four-bedroom in San Clemente, Calif., to an $88 million, 30,000-square-foot remodeled mansion in Los Angeles’s Holmby Hills. In 2015, one of his 1931 Spanish Colonial Revivals sold for $38 million in the posh Bel-Air neighborhood—almost $19 million more than when it sold in 2011. At least two other million-dollar homes for sale are described as “Williams inspired”—agents say that is common practice in a town that is inclined to name-drop. “I think there’s a resurgence of interest in him,” says Robin Collins, an agent with Keller Williams who, in May, listed a $3.2 million Mediterranean Mr. Williams built in 1926. Mr. Williams, a Los Angeles native whose first luxury-home commissions began in the 1920s, designed over 2,000 private homes across the globe, about 300 of which are located in Los Angeles’s so-called Platinum Triangle neighborhoods, says Karen Elyse Hudson, Mr. Williams’s granddaughter and biographer. He died in 1980 at the age of 85. Mr. Williams amassed an impressive clientele, including Lucille Ball, Lon Chaney and Bill “Bojangles” Robinson, thanks in part to his willingness to work in whatever style his client demanded, Ms. Hudson says. In an era of deeply held prejudice, he learned to draw renderings upside down, he wrote in an 1937 article, so as to never force his white patrons to sit beside him. Today his homes are prized for their intricate detailing and elegant proportions—two qualities that have spared many of his homes from the wrecking ball of new-home developers. “He could see forward and around corners,” says Ms. Black, 73, a wealth manager who owns the 1938 Georgian Colonial in Holmby Hills. She bought the home for $2.1 million in 1996, records show. Unlike many homes of that era, the 7,000-square-foot home has taller, 9-foot ceilings. Its largely open floorplan, with an emphasis on outdoor living, is echoed in new luxury homes today. The foyer and curving grand staircase, a hallmark of Williams’s designs, is decorated with a Baccarat chandelier purchased by Hollywood starlet Ms. Gabor, the former homeowner, Ms. Black says. Former renters include Frank Sinatra, Mia Farrow and Audrey Hepburn, according to Ms. Hudson’s book, “Paul R. Williams: Classic Hollywood Style.” The sitting room hides an amenity from the first homeowner, “From Here to Eternity” producer Buddy Adler: A hidden storage area once used for film reels and projector equipment in what was then a home theater. Ms. Black, who lives at the five-bedroom home with her husband, David Scott, a retired astronaut, is selling the 1.1-acre property to be closer to family in Florida. They listed the home last year for $12.95 million with Jade Mills of Coldwell Banker. They took it off the market near the end of 2016 “to refresh” it and redecorate, Ms. Black said. In June, they relisted it for $13.995 million on the strength of the market and Mr. Williams’s surging name value, Ms. Mills said. (His AIA award and a subsequent honor from the University of Southern California Architectural Guild were given this year.) In Ontario, Calif., about an hour east of the heated Los Angeles market, Darius Long is preparing to sell a very different Williams home—a 2,250-square-foot, International-style Midcentury Modern, circa 1947. “People thought it was a pharmacy,” says Mr. Long, 54, a semiretired aerospace electronics buyer, about the avant-garde design. Surrounded by Colonials, the two-level, two-toned, green-and-brown home is sited on an angle to create a large semicircular drive. Mr. Long bought the home from the original owner for $435,000 in 2004, records show. Inside, there is original woodwork and built-ins from renowned craftsman Sam Maloof. With ample glass on the front and rear of the home, the open floorplan is filled with natural light. Floor-to-ceiling glass sliders in the rear open to a yard with a centuries-old oak tree. The finishes, even down to the linoleum floors and the 1960s General Electric stovetop, are as the prior owner left them. “I consider myself a docent—just a caretaker of the house,” says Mr. Long, who says he has changed almost nothing about the home. Mr. Long plans to list the home for around $1 million in the next few months to downsize to a home in another western state. Matthew Berkley of Deasy/Penner & Partners, the listing agent and an architectural historian, says that the unusual design and the fact that this is one of only two known Paul Williams-designed homes in the city justifies the listing price. Homes of a similar size nearby are listed in the $600,000 range. Mr. Long says he will only sell to a buyer who wants to preserve the spirit of the home. Williams-designed homes haven’t been immune to buyers’ demands. Ms. Hudson estimates that, “on the low side,” about 40 of her grandfather’s homes have been demolished in the Los Angeles area. In 2006, one of his most notable homes, the Midcentury Modern bachelor pad of Mr. Sinatra, was torn down to make way for new construction, she says. In Los Angeles, due to the damaging effects of hot weather and limited housing supply, homes older than 20 years are becoming scarce, because developers believe they can maximize their investment by building new, says Jeff Hyland of Hilton & Hyland. But the rising profile of architects like Paul Williams is helping to turn the tide. “It’s a reason to say to a seller, ‘Wait, don’t tear that down—we think it’s worth more if you keep it,’ ” he says. There is another safeguard for Williams homes—they seldom come up for sale. John Sweeney, 65, a civil-rights attorney, bought a 6,000-square-foot Spanish Colonial Revival in the Los Feliz neighborhood of Los Angeles for $1.975 million in 2003, according to city records. “I feigned that I didn’t know Paul Williams,” Mr. Sweeney recalls, to drive a hard bargain. “Of course, I knew everything about him.” Mr. Sweeney, who is African-American, says he found a kindred spirit in Mr. Williams, who faced discrimination, even as he became a household name. “It was very special to me to live in a house that was designed by an African-American who couldn’t live there,” he says. The original neighborhood covenants, he discovered, only allowed the home to transfer to white home buyers. In 2008, he had the 1927 home designated a Los Angeles historic cultural monument, effectively making it more difficult for the home to be demolished. He has no plans to sell, but should his family decide otherwise, there are protections in place. “I wanted to make sure,” he says, “that nobody can take down these walls.” The post Architect Paul Williams Blazed a Trail, and More Home Buyers Are Discovering His Work appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®. via http://www.realtor.com/news/trends/architect-paul-williams-blazed-a-trail-and-more-home-buyers-are-discovering-his-work/ Actress Mindy Kaling has sold her home in the Hollywood Hills for $1.61 million, according to the Los Angeles Times. The creator and star of “The Mindy Project” bought the property four years ago for $1.7 million, so she’s absorbing a small loss on the 1,600-square-foot home in Los Angeles. The two-bedroom, three-bathroom house boasts views of the city and Pacific and is just minutes from the Sunset Strip and Beverly Hills. It’s currently surrounded by bigger, pricier properties and was marketed as a potential teardown, which explains its relatively low price tag. Built in the 1920s, the home sits on a 6,000-square-foot lot tucked into the hills. It includes a step-down living room with floor-to-ceiling windows. The galley kitchen has a breakfast bar and is adjacent to a small dining area. The master bedroom features opens to a deck overlooking L.A. Kaling, 38, rose to fame in a memorable supporting role as Kelly Kapoor in the hit sitcom “The Office.” She currently stars in, writes, and executive produces “The Mindy Project” on Hulu. She’s also written a couple of best-sellers: “Why Not Me?” and “Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me?” The post Actress and Comedian Mindy Kaling Finds Buyer for Hollywood Hills House appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®. via http://www.realtor.com/news/celebrity-real-estate/mindy-kaling-finds-buyer-hollywood-hills-house/ While the most popular properties on realtor.com® last week were all about fixer-uppers, this week’s most popular home is a true “Fixer Upper.” As in prominently featured on the HGTV hit starring Chip and Joanna Gaines. The listing for the one-bedroom home in Waco, TX, priced at nearly $1 million saw a flurry of activity from fans of the show. As we wrote earlier this week, the homeowner is asking for an enormous premium on the wee residence thanks to the home’s television fame and divine renovation. Will a savvy investor be willing to pay the price to ride the coattails of the Gaines’ magic? The runner-up this week is Madonna’s childhood home in Michigan. Its top-to-bottom renovation means you don’t actually have to love the ’80s to love this place. Although you might be inspired to do your best “Vogue.” You also clicked on a few historic houses with inspired and masterful updates. An 1893 Queen Anne Victorian and a mansion built in 1865 offer you the chance to live in the grand style of days gone by. Without further ado, here are the 10 most popular properties of the week. 10. 956 Franklin Rd, Morton, MSPrice: $199,900 ——-- 9. 303 Highland Ave, New Albany, INPrice: $444,800 ——-- 8. 4140 W Route 6, Morris, ILPrice: $575,000 ——-- 7. 121 Courtney Woods Ln, Stuarts Draft, VAPrice: $289,900 ——-- 6. 87936 County Highway 61, Sturgeon Lake, MNPrice: $1,200,000 ——-- 5. 1822 Mount Vernon Rd, Dunwoody, GAPrice: $519,900 ——-- 4. 1683 Highway 1, Fairfield, IAPrice: $1,650,000 ——-- 3. 671 West Rd, New Canaan, CTPrice: $7,500,000 ——-- 2. 2036 Oklahoma Ave, Rochester Hills, MIPrice: $479,000 ——-- 1. 624 S 7th St, Waco, TXPrice: $950,000 It’s being marketed as an investment property to rent out to fans of the show. Along with a stunning renovation, the place includes all the decor and furnishings and boasts proximity to the Magnolia Market. The high price includes the unique design touches by Chip and Joanna Gaines, including a Dutch door, vaulted ceiling, and outdoor fire pit. The post Tiny ‘Fixer Upper’ Home With a Supersized Price Is This Week’s Most Popular Listing appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®. via http://www.realtor.com/news/trends/fixer-upper-home-waco-tx-weeks-popular-listing/ Cycling legend Greg LeMond is ready to pedal away from his 40-acre estate in Minnesota’s Twin Cities area. He recently listed his property in Medina, MN, for just a shade under $5 million. The Georgian-style mansion was built in 1988 by architect Ken Durr. It features six bedrooms, seven baths, and three half-baths spread over 11,550 square feet of space. The 55-year-old, three-time Tour de France champion has taken great care in updating the home over the years. The kitchen now has a 10-foot-high ceiling, center island topped with Carrara marble, Thermador gas range, built-in coffee bar, walk-in pantry, and oak hardwood floors. Speaking of floors, within the mansion you’ll find Italian marble, wide-plank wood, reclaimed oak, or herringbone-patterned oak. Blue stone is used on the home’s terrace. Other luxury features include enameled wainscoting, Palladian windows, and five fireplaces, which come in handy during Minnesota winters. No one need ever feel a chill on this property—even the attached four-car garage is heated, as is the separate outbuilding and shop. The home’s lower level has both an amusement room/theater and a game room. A wet bar with refrigerator enables any snack attacks. Outdoors there are with sprawling lawns, a tennis court, and nearby hiking trails. LeMond, a two-time Road Race World Champion, is retired, but he keeps busy with speaking engagements and charitable causes and organizations. LeMond and his wife, Kathy, moved to Minnesota in the early ’90s to get away from spotlight and raise their children in a less public environment. He’s now selling the family estate because he’s decided it’s time to relocate. His recent signing of a $44 million contract with Australia’s Deakin University to develop and produce carbon fiber bikes and other products could point Down Under. Patty Napier and Carrie Fleischhacker of Coldwell Banker Burnet, in Wayzata, MN, have the listing. The post Cycling Great Greg LeMond Pedaling Away From Minnesota Mansion appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®. via http://www.realtor.com/news/celebrity-real-estate/greg-lemond-minnesota-estate/ Wait, there’s more: For $48 million, you get not only a sprawling downtown Manhattan penthouse, but two staff apartments and two parking spaces in the building’s garage. The roughly 7,100-square-foot duplex penthouse under construction sits on the top two floors of Madison Square Park Tower, a glassy condominium on 22nd Street. The two studios, which can be used for staff or guests, are located on a lower floor and each measure about 600 square feet, said Ian Bruce Eichner, founder of the Continuum Company, the building’s developer. The two parking spaces are among 16 in the building and normally sell for about $500,000 each. The penthouse, on the 64th and 65th floors of the building, will have a double-height living room and views of the Empire State Building, said Fredrik Eklund of Douglas Elliman Real Estate, who is handling sales in the building with colleague John Gomes. While it will likely end up with about five bedrooms and five baths, it is being marketed as a “white box,” with the expectation that the buyer will create their own layout, Mr. Eklund said. Overlooking Madison Square Park, the 83-unit building started sales in 2014, and is roughly 75% sold, Mr. Eichner said. He said construction is mostly completed and closings should begin in the next few weeks. Another penthouse measuring about 6,000 square feet was listed for $38 million in early 2016 but it was taken off the market while it is being completed, Mr. Eichner said. A unit on the 62nd floor listed at $24.95 million is in contract, Mr. Eklund said. Building amenities include a half basketball court, a yoga studio, a gym, and a golf simulator room. There is also an outdoor entertaining terrace, a poker room and a billiards room. The post New York Penthouse With Bonus Apartments and Parking Asks $48 Million appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®. via http://www.realtor.com/news/unique-homes/new-york-penthouse-bonus-apartments-parking-asks-48-million/ An enchanting lakeside estate in a lushly wooded setting in Woodside, CA, is the most expensive home on realtor.com® this week. Built in 1915 and listed for $48 million, this 7-acre property comes with a high-end history. It truly stands out in a town filled with country estates, ancient redwood trees, and, well, a lot of tech wealth. Never heard of Woodside? That’s by design. This low-key area less than an hour south of San Francisco has an intentionally small business district with a handful of restaurants, a hardware store, and a grocery store. Founded during the Gold Rush, it’s now one of the wealthiest cities in America. This estate reflects the wealth and the history of Woodside. Once part of the landholdings of spice merchant August Schilling in the early 19th century, Canardia, as this property is known, belonged to socialite Adelade Kirkbride. It remained in the Kirkbride family until early 2008, when it was sold for $6,175,000. The current owner, who has lived at the estate for a decade, has decided to downsize. The estate evokes a bygone era: “It’s got all these incredible features that you very seldom see these days,” says listing agent Pierre Buljan. “This kind of property is very hard to find.” One major factor that sets Canardia apart in this hilly enclave? “It’s a totally flat 7 acres,” according to Buijan. Plus, the property “has its own lake of pure freshwater all year long. That makes it really unique.” For a tech mogul with no worries over making the monthly mortgage payment, the property is a showpiece without parallel. It boasts a massive mansion, stables, landscaped gardens, and outdoor entertaining space. The chef’s kitchen and bathrooms have been updated. And although the estate is tucked in the hills, it’s an easy drive to the famed Sand Hill Road, Stanford University, as well as the headquarters of Apple, Google, and Facebook. The proximity to the tech titans of today isn’t apparent at this woodsy retreat, which serves as a rural respite to high-tech living. Parts of the home were renovated in the 1950s, yet the interior remains surprisingly modern, with an open kitchen and family room, game room, five bedrooms, seven baths, and a master bedroom wing. The outdoor living space includes a pool, pool house, fire pits, and kitchen, with plenty of space for dining alfresco surrounded by lush gardens and a fountain. For the equine set, the property is zoned for 14 horses and includes stables and box stalls. Who will make their way to wealthy Woodside to carve out the next chapter of Canardia’s history? Time (and lots of money) will tell… The post At $48M, Elegant Woodside Estate Is Our Most Expensive New Listing appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®. via http://www.realtor.com/news/unique-homes/woodside-estate-most-expensive/ Sellers take note: The land beneath your home could be worth more than the home itself—in some cases a lot more. In some big cities, particularly along the coasts where land is at a premium, zoning often permits an apartment building or small condo complex to go up where a small, single-family home once stood. And that can make the land itself, and the possibilities it presents, significantly more valuable than the house sitting on top of it. More and more developers and builders are taking note. Teardowns accounted for 10.2%, or 79,000, of all of the new home construction started in 2016, according to the National Association of Home Builders. That’s up from 7.7%, or 55,000, in 2015. In a housing market defined by skyrocketing home prices and razor-thin inventory levels, teardowns are becoming more common. “It’s so hard for developers to acquire land to build on due to environmental regulations and getting zoning approval,” says economist Paul Emrath, NAHB’s vice president of survey and housing policy research. And that’s what makes teardowns so attractive. Traditionally, a lot is worth only about 10% of the overall property value; the home is worth the remaining 90%, Emrath says. But in some costly parts of the country that math has changed. “If you have a parcel of land and … a single-family home and you can get rezoned for a multifamily [project] and put up a [condo or apartment] high-rise … then that’s going to be more valuable,” especially in a red-hot housing market, Emrath says. Teardowns aren’t just homes. Sometimes, they’re empty school buildings or decaying commercial structures that developers want to turn into multiple homes. Or they might be aging homes in bad shape that the new owners want to replace with newer, larger residences—like a McMansion. “Trying to renovate it or bring it up to what you want might be much more expensive than just starting over,” Emrath says. The most teardowns were in the West, the most expensive U.S. region, where about 33,400 structures met the wrecking ball in 2016. Quite a few structures, 23,800 of them, met their makers in the South as well, followed by the Midwest, at 12,300, and the Northeast, at 9,800. Teardowns peaked in popularity in the late 1990s and early 2000s until the financial crisis hit. Now they are not only surging again, they are also being fundamentally redefined. In the hottest markets, it’s more than just substandard homes being torn down. In San Francisco, plenty of developers and regular homeowners are buying homes that aren’t even in bad shape simply to get the land, says Patrick Carlisle, chief marketing analyst at Paragon Real Estate Group, in San Francisco. That’s why wannabe homeowners are dropping small—and large—fortunes on relatively small homes. “It might start out as a 1,400- to 1,600-square-foot house,” he says. “Yet the zoning and building code will allow you to put a 3,200-square-foot house on the land.” The post Could Your Property Be Worth More If You Tear Down Your Home? appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®. via http://www.realtor.com/news/trends/teardowns-rising/ |
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April 2021
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