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The single-parent household can be headed by a mother, a father, a grandparent, an uncle, or aunt. According to the Pew Research Center, between 25 to 30 percent of children under age 18 in the U ...
Once, the single-family house was as much a symbol of California as the golden bear. But its precarious status these days is illustrated by state Senate Bill 827 , sponsored by a senator from San ...
With the cost of buying a home financially out of reach for most Americans, a growing number of people are choosing to rent a single-family home. Nearly 2.5 million U.S. households have rented a ...
Single-family zoning, which restricts the kind of residential housing that can be built on a property, has been central to cementing segregation in many American cities. Skip to content.
While the yearly rent growth turned negative in March after a period of double-digit price growth in 2021 and 2022, single-family monthly rental rates increased from $2,212 to $2,330 at the close ...
Single family building also slowed in micro counties and non metro/micro counties dropping from 19.6% and 26.5% in Q4 2021 to 6.8% and -1.0%, respectively.
Single-family rental home prices are soaring and increased a record 12.6 percent in January compared to the previous year, according to new data from CoreLogic. (Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images ...
Major urban areas where condos are appreciating faster than detached single-family units include Seattle, San Francisco, San Jose, Atlanta, Dallas-Fort Worth, Denver, Syracuse, San Diego, Boston ...
3. Space and flexibility. Single-family homes are typically larger than townhomes. You’ll likely have more square footage, more bedrooms and more privacy for members of your household.
Simply put, single-family zoning rules — or “apartment bans,’’ as they’re sometimes called — are a big reason housing is so scarce, expensive, and exclusive in certain places.
End single-family zoning? Legalize "missing middle" housing? What to call the policy being considered in Arlington, and elsewhere, depends on whom you ask.
It’s legal to build a single-family house on more than 90 percent of land in Connecticut. But building an apartment with three units or more is only allowed on 2 percent.