Luxury Condos Appeal to More Than Urban Professionals

The stereotype is familiar: a high-earning professional purchases a condominium in a city center, walks to the office, uses the building gym, and spends most of the week surrounded by business districts and urban amenities. While that buyer certainly exists, they no longer represent the entire condominium market. Visit many newer residential towers and the … Read more

Buyers Are Paying Close Attention to Building Management

Condominium buyers often spend hours comparing floor plans, amenities, finishes, and neighborhood features. Yet many experienced owners will argue that one of the most important factors rarely appears in listing photos. Building management has become a growing point of focus for buyers who view property ownership as a long-term commitment rather than a short-term purchase. … Read more

Smaller Condos in Prime Locations Continue to Sell

Spend enough time following residential listings and a pattern quickly becomes apparent. Larger homes often generate attention, but smaller condominium units in established neighborhoods rarely stay on the market for long. Buyers may express a preference for additional space, yet many ultimately choose location when forced to make a tradeoff. This dynamic is hardly limited … Read more

Premium Buildings Are Competing on Service

Two condominium buildings can offer similar floor plans, comparable locations, and nearly identical amenity packages, yet buyers often develop a strong preference for one over the other. The difference is frequently difficult to identify from a brochure or property listing. It becomes apparent only after speaking with residents or spending time in the building itself. … Read more

Not Every Condo Amenity Adds Value

Walk through enough condominium developments and the amenity packages start to look remarkably similar. Rooftop lounges, private dining rooms, coworking spaces, golf simulators, entertainment suites, pet facilities, outdoor kitchens, and resident clubs have become common features in many newer buildings. The assumption behind these additions is straightforward: more amenities make a property more attractive. The … Read more

Some Condo Buildings Feel More Like Private Clubs

A resident can leave their apartment, answer a few emails in a shared workspace, exercise in a fully equipped gym, meet friends for coffee in a residents-only lounge, and attend a community event later that evening without ever leaving the building. In some condominium developments, that has become a normal day. The change is noticeable … Read more

City Living Looks Different Than It Did Ten Years Ago

Some apartment buildings now devote more space to package rooms than they once did to storage areas. That detail might seem minor, but it says a great deal about how urban life has changed. People work differently, shop differently, commute differently, and spend more time at home than many city planners, developers, and property owners … Read more

New Luxury Towers Keep Appearing in Unexpected Places

A common assumption in residential real estate is that luxury towers belong in a predictable set of places. People expect them in downtown Miami, central London, Manhattan, Singapore, or a handful of waterfront districts that have attracted wealth for decades. Yet that assumption becomes harder to defend every year. Drive through certain secondary cities, coastal … Read more

More Professionals Are Choosing Condos Over Large Houses

For decades, the detached house represented a common housing goal for many professionals. A larger property often symbolized career progression, financial stability, and growing household needs. Extra bedrooms, larger yards, and additional living space were frequently viewed as natural upgrades as incomes increased. While detached homes remain highly desirable for many buyers, housing preferences have … Read more

High-End Property Still Appeals to Long-Term Investors

Property markets experience periods of expansion, correction, and recovery, yet certain segments continue attracting investor interest across different market cycles. High-end residential property is one example. Although it is often associated with lifestyle purchases and owner-occupiers, it also remains an area of interest for investors who take a long-term view of wealth preservation and asset … Read more