After decades of car-centric building, developers are pivoting to “healthy places” where walkability, parks, community gardens and public transit thrive.
After decades of car-centric building, developers are pivoting to “healthy places” where walkability, parks, community gardens and public transit thrive.
Millennials are returning to the suburbs as their children reach school age, Said real estate advisory leader Mitch Roschelle.
American cities—and not just the priciest ones—are more and more the domain of renters.