Sunday, May 25th, 2008
Mortgages: Help for Struggling Homeowners
Lenders are increasingly willing to change their loan terms for struggling borrowers, but the flexibility has not been enough to help many homeowners.
Lenders are increasingly willing to change their loan terms for struggling borrowers, but the flexibility has not been enough to help many homeowners.
Reflecting the national trends, some builders in Westchester have shelved residential projects and are waiting out the storm.
Many city officials, residents and developers believe ferry service can finally succeed in New York.
The Landmarks Preservation Commission has required what is apparently the first landmark restoration of a white brick building in New York: the 1960 co-op at 900 Fifth Avenue, at 71st Street.
The Kensington area of Brooklyn, with lower prices and a slower pace than “brownstone Brooklyn,” offers an increasingly popular alternative to the borough’s more gentrified neighborhoods.
The developer of the former stable at 11 Spring Street has been putting together a book to celebrate graffiti and the urban art exhibition.
At 15 Central Park West, perhaps the most successful development of the decade, brokers and owners are struggling to figure out just what the apartments are worth on the resale market.
Last week William F. Reilly put his double-wide town house located on a private cobblestone street facing the East River on the market for $25 million.
Often, for no extra money, buyers get to brag about their home’s provenance, and show off inside info — where Sinatra sang, where Bowie hid out.