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Showing posts from 2022

Your Moving Checklist for Managing the Unmanageable

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Your Moving Checklist for Managing the Unmanageable Click on the link above for an outline of how to make your move an easy, organized task with helpful tips for planning a move.     And if you haven't yet found your new apartment home, please reach out to me, I'd love to assist you with finding the perfect place to match your location, lifestyle, budget, and amenity preferences, Free!  🤙Contact Kathy Curtis via phone, text, or visit the website and submit your contact information.  Our apartment locating service, Texas Apartment Locators Houston is a free service. We are paid by the property, there's never a charge for you to use our service.  Licensed Real Estate Sales Agents specializing in apartment locating.   🔈Shout out to busy professionals, relocating to Houston or the surrounding areas, 1st time renters, or seasoned renters, put a caring agent to work for you today.       

Trammell Crow building luxe rentals north of Houston, Kingwood, Texas

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Development built with Japan’s Daiwa House Group to be completed by end of 2023 Despite  recession fears  and rising interest rates, the Houston area continues to attract multifamily investors eager to build in the Bayou City. High Street Residential, the luxury apartment developer subsidiary of the venerable Dallas-based real estate empire of Trammell Crow Company is teaming up with Japan’s Daiwa House Group, mostly known for prefabricated single-family homes, to add yet another high-end apartment development to Houston’s inventory. The joint venture will build a new apartment and townhome project in the northern Houston suburb of Kingwood, according to a Houston Chronicle report. The garden-style apartment community, slated to be completed by the end of 2023, will include 240 apartments and 49 townhomes for rent. Despite Daiwa’s involvement, there will be no “wholesale pre-fabrication in the project,” Trammell Crow spokesperson Elise Maguire told The Real Deal. The Residences at King

U.S. Needs 4.3M More Apartments by 2035 to Address Demand, Deficit and Affordability

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U.S. Needs 4.3M More Apartments by 2035 to Address Demand, Deficit and Affordability:  Amidst demographic shifts and lingering pandemic impacts on the population and broader economy, the U.S. faces a pressing need to build 4.3 million new apartments by 2035, according to a new study commissioned by the National Multifamily Housing Council (NMHC) and the National Apartment Association (NAA). Key findings: Shortage of 600,000 apartment homes. The 4.3 million apartment homes needed include an existing 600,000 apartment home deficit because of underbuilding due in large part to the 2008 financial crisis. Loss of affordable units. The number of affordable units (those with rents less than $1,000 per month) declined by 4.7 million from 2015 to 2020. Homeownership. Apartment demand also factors in a projected 3.8% increase in the homeownership rate. Immigration. Immigration is a significant driver of apartment demand, and levels tapered before the pandemic has remained low. A reversal of th

Houston The Number 1 Spot for 2021 And The Migration Continues for Other Cities In Texas Also

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  https://www.pensketruckrental.com/renting-from-penske/blog/penske-top-ten-moving-destinations/ Check out the article for more details! And if you're in need of an apartment in Houston, look no further, we got you covered. Call or submit your contact information at AptExpert.com Our free apartment locator service will find the perfect place for you and your family. "Opening Doors For You Since 1992" Visit the website to submit your contact information and put a licensed, caring professional to work for you today, 100% Free service ! We're paid by the property owner for providing a new resident!     

Why Rental Prices Are Going Up

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  Time Magazine Rental prices going up  BY ABBY VESOULIS - Author G arrett deGraffenreid, a 23-year-old New York University graduate student, knew the rent on his one-bedroom Manhattan apartment would jump when he saw a Trader Joe’s grocery store pop up down the block. “The writing was on the wall,” he says. What he didn’t anticipate was just how much his rent would rise. When deGraffenreid and his partner signed a lease last year, they paid about $1,600 per month. On Feb. 11, they received a notice informing them that a new lease beginning next month would cost $2,750 per month: a 69% surge. “It felt defeating,” says deGraffenreid. He responded to the notice with a plea for a more reasonable rent increase, but was met with a “brick wall” response. The gist of their message was: "There’s nothing you can do so don’t waste your time trying. Good luck!" He isn’t alone. Similarly jarring double-digit rent spikes are happening all over the country. In Henderson, Nevada, rents rose