City officials have severed their ties to the Olmsted, a condominium project in Charles Village that was stymied by the recession and by its developer
Read More »Baltimore issues RFP for Parkway Theater
City development officials are moving forward with an ambitious plan to remake the area north of Baltimore’s Penn Station as an arts and culture destination.
Read More »Construction spending, pending home sales rise
Construction spending and pending home sales both were better than expected in March, hopeful signs that those battered industries may be stabilizing.
Read More »Canton Crossing development is in question
The future of Canton Crossing, a massive real estate development that was set to transform a trendy East Baltimore neighborhood, is in question after the failure of the Atlanta-based bank that invested $10 million in the project.
Read More »Columbia buildings in Ch. 11
General Growth Properties Inc., of Chicago, has added several properties in Columbia to its list of more than 160 shopping centers and entities seeking bankruptcy protection.
Read More »Buy a house, get a divorce lawyer for free
For homebuyers who just can’t bear the thought of driving around a free-but-gas-guzzling SUV, realtors in Spain are offering the next big incentive: a free divorce. Spanish real estate company Geimsa is throwing in a divorce lawyer with the purhcase of ...
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Read More »Homebuyers hope to time the bottom
The number of house hunters out this spring is an encouraging sign that the real estate market is beginning to turn around. There's just one problem — it seems a lot of them are in no hurry to buy.
Read More »Home credit spurs buyers in Baltimore
Despite a recent report from the city
Read More »State's home sales show some life
Parts of Maryland's real estate market might be showing preliminary signs of turning around, with the state's Washington suburbs leading the way, according to the most recent available statistics.
Read More »5 charged in $70M mortgage Ponzi scheme
Five people were charged with fraud Monday in what prosecutors say was a mortgage scheme that defrauded over 1,000 people of more than $70 million.
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