Ten people (or companies) spent a combined half-billion dollars on their Manhattan apartments this year.
The mansion sits between a fishpond and the Paiko Lagoon on the Hawaiian island of Oahu.
New construction methods have some coastal real estate developers thumbing their nose at Mother Nature.
Denver, Phoenix, Philadelphia and the suburbs of Atlanta have all drawn foreign investment this year.
The MTA has bought Grand Central Terminal for the bargain-basement price of $35 million.
The Westminster City Council is concerned that mega-mansions will overshadow the needs of less wealthy residents.
A developer is planning a luxurious, 17-story assisted-living center with a spa, rooftop garden and “bistro.”
Real estate brokers in Long Island City are giddy about the news Amazon is moving a headquarters into town.
Winston Churchill described it to Franklin Roosevelt as “one of the most beautiful places in the world.”
Agrotourism is turning once peaceful farmland into magnets for traffic and loud, boisterous crowds.
In the billionaires-only real estate market, value might exist only by comparison.
It’s a uniquely contemporary development in a house that’s steeped in history.
The listing comes as the ultra-luxury sector is awash in inventory.
Buyers are paying premiums of up to 132 percent for homes with a famous brand slapped onto them.
The Central American nation was already one of the cheapest places to live in the Americas.
It's going to take 35 years to build and will be finished in 2070.
The Packers plan to build more than 200 homes a block from legendary Lambeau Field.
It's the largest privately owned beachfront holding on Sydney Harbour.
The developer behind the forthcoming 555 West End Avenue condo conversion has faith in his own instinct.
The property would be the most expensive house ever sold in the city.