Recent Quinnipiac poll data show that 43 percent of California voters say they can't afford to live in the state, and more than 75 percent believe that there's a housing crisis.
To determine how hot (or cold) the housing market is as the spring real estate season kicks off, a new study examines sales pace in the 250 largest U.S. markets from March 2018 to February 2019.
Silicon Valley startup and nonprofit New Story and Austin-based construction technology company Icon are taking on new-home construction and affordability by way of 3D printing.
In 2018, U.S. homeowners collectively gained 8 percent in home equity, or $678 billion, per CoreLogic data. Per homeowner, that comes out to about $9,700 in added wealth.
The latest annual report by the Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University covers the state of the U.S. home remodeling market, following lags in the building sector.
With Tax Day coming up, homeowners will be some of the first to see how the Trump administration-enacted Tax Cuts and Jobs Act affects the way that they file.
A new paper published in the journal Urban Studies tracks suburban and urban neighborhood economic status shifts from 1970 to 2010, and the findings are confounding recent, commonly-held assumptions.
The latest release of jobs data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics show that the construction industry, both residential and nonresidential, lost 31,000 jobs in February 2019.