Despite headwinds in the luxury home market, a number of uber expensive properties changed hands in 2019.
Sometimes pricing an ultra-luxury mansion well above market value is part of a seller’s overall strategy.
More houses worth $25 million-plus were bought on Manhattan's 57th Street in the last five years than on any other road.
The market can be unforgiving when “starchitect” homes are listed for sale.
The Duke of Westminster is facing opposition to his plan to demolish low-income hnousing.
The market has changed since 2012, when One57 tower in Midtown reached over $1 billion in purchases in six months.
New York isn’t the only city to decommission its trading floors; cities such as Manchester and Paris have, too.
The fund has been boosting its investments in the U.S., including stakes in retail properties in Manhattan.
Seattle has seen some of the fastest home-price increases of any big U.S. metro area in the past few years.
The compound and farm comfortably accommodates 25 people—or over a thousand for a pumpkin-launching contest.
Coca-Cola Co. inherited the tower in 1983, through its purchase of Columbia Pictures.
The ruse was aimed at winning greater compensation when their house was demolished for a new development.
The history of the equestrian mecca by Virginia's Blue Ridge Mountains dates back to the early 19th century.
The father-daughter team is embarking on an ambitious real estate play in one of America’s fastest-growing big cities.
The home was “designed to follow the contour of the mountain.
By the end of the century, 13 million Americans will need to move just because of rising sea levels.
The Renaissance structure played host to Mary Queen of Scots, who reportedly played golf on the palace grounds.
Sky-high prices and fears of a recession are weighing on a key sector of the economy.
They bought the home in 2015, but never moved in because of haunting letters signed "The Watcher."
Sellers of furnished luxury homes virtually never recoup the full value of their expensive furniture.