Recognized as one of Atlanta’s most coveted addresses for both residents and visitors, Buckhead’s central location ensures accessibility from other parts of the city.
Building In Buckhead: Construction Continues On New Luxury Condos - Buckhead, GA - The Dillon Buckhead is an 18-floor residential tower that is set to open in 2024.
Atlanta (PRWEB) May 25, 2022 Kolter Urban reports a staggering $62 million in sales reservations since announcing its newest condo project in Buckhead, The
Atlanta Magazine
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Whether you’re in the market for a new house or looking to renovate or redecorate your current abode, consult our guide to all things home. You’ll find plenty of design inspiration, gorgeous decor, and dream homes galore.
Charleston Inspired
Hillandale features all the advantages of living in a close-knit community. Priced from the $800s to 1 million plus, Hillandale is inspired by the streetscapes of Charleston, South Carolina. Residents arrive home to pebble-stone driveways, gracious front porches with historic gas lanterns, covered outdoor dining and living areas, and beautiful private gardens. Once inside, the homes at Hillandale are an entertainer’s dream with gracious indoor and outdoor living spaces. These exquisite homes are loaded with the latest in design features and provide the homeowners with minimal yard maintenance.
Atlanta Magazine
Are Atlanta’s condos making a comeback?
Tracking Atlanta’s for-sale multifamily trends and the recent dominance of apartments
Photograph courtesy of SMcKinley Homes
Since the Great Recession, glassy towers have reshaped the skylines of Midtown, Buckhead, and parts of downtown, but relatively few of those stacked new units have been for sale. Instead, they’re apartments, catering to millennial professionals who’ve preferred renting over buying, transient businesspeople, and college students. That’s a stark contrast from Atlanta’s pre-recession building trends, when condos ruled.
“In the early 2000s, there was the boom going on, when [the market] was overinflated because of the subprime crisis and everything else,” says Ladson Haddow, managing partner of Haddow & Company, an Atlanta real estate consulting firm. “Then, the ’08 and ’09 recession happened, and [condo development] was flat. That’s largely because so many developers and banks an