An interactive platform by the University of Richmond called "Mapping Inequality" looks into just that. Specifically, it digs into the mother of all redlining resources: Home Owners’ Loan Corporation (HOLC) maps from the Great Depression.
Yesterday we asked you to guess the asking price for this 3-bedroom, 2.5-bath picturebook Tudor in Montlake originally built in 1928. The actual price comes in at $1,286,000.
PriceSpotter is Curbed's asking price guessing game. We provide you with some details and pictures from a real estate listing, and you take a crack at the price in the comments. Tomorrow we reveal the answer. And hey, no cheating!
Montlake manages to be historic and modern. Whether it's affordable is a personal assessment. While you probably think of million-dollar homes when you think of this neighborhood but we were able to find a few in six figures. Check them out below.
Thanks to some intrepid folks at Reddit and elsewhere, we've culled the reports to find out where you need to head if you want to make sure you're collecting a very specific type of Pokémon.
As the housing market has taken off in recent years, the number of million-dollar homes has followed suit. Based on numbers from Trulia, the Seattle region is now among the ten fastest-growing markets when it comes to seven-figure home sales.
As the story goes, a spat between a divorcing husband and wife in 1925 led to the creation of an 830-square-foot house at 2022 24th Ave E. The 4.5-foot-wide home built on a pie-shaped lot was literally built out of spite.