Residential Archives | Page 41 of 43 | CREtech
A huge number of companies have launched ...
Real estate is one of those classic industries we always talk about in Silicon Valley: multi-trillion dollars in scale in terms of assets and transaction volume, but still relying on good ole’ pen and paper to get anything actually done.
a slew of startups that have developed technology aimed at making the process smoother and cheaper in one way or another.
Buying a home is one of the biggest, and most expensive, decisions in a person’s life. Over the past year or so, we’ve written about
In March, Lester and Janet Knispel paid $1.55 million for a white-columned house on the second fairway at Isleworth Golf & Country Club in Windermere, Fla. Now their televisions are mounted on the walls and their
I had a couple of deals in the works before this whole thing hit, and what I’m doing now is following through and making sure everything goes through to closing. It hasn’t been easy.
A co-founder who left Redfin in 2006 is suing his former company for copying virtual home tour technology he later developed for his new company, Surefield. David Eraker filed two suits alleging intellectual property theft regarding two incidents.
emerged from last decade’s foreclosure crisis owning huge pools of rental houses a...
Wall Street’s wager on high-earning suburban renters is paying off, and it is raising its stakes. Investors are flocking to America’s mega landlords, drawn by signs the companies that
Airbnb Inc. has raised money at roughly half the valuation it commanded five months ago, as the coronavirus pandemic ravages the lodging industry. Zeus Living Inc. raised about
A corporate-housing startup backed by
As many tech startups cut staff and figure out how to survive during the COVID-19 crisis,
Rise Buildings, a property operations and occupant experience platform that manages daily operations and activities for building staff and occupants, announced today that it is partnering with LifeStar...
Landlord sues co-living firm for bailing on lease. A lawsuit accuses German co-living firm Quarters of “opportunistically” bailing on an $8 million lease in Brooklyn just as New York City became the global epicenter of the coronavirus pandemic.