Developers looking at CT suburbs, Shoreline for new apartment projects
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An artist’s rendering of The Bradley, a 30-unit apartment complex that will be built on Bradley Road in Madison, near the town’s commuter rail station and a few blocks from downtown.Contributed photo
Much of the focus of residential developers building apartments in Connecticut in recent years has been on the state’s urban centers: Stamford, New Haven and Hartford cities with restaurants, services, commuter rail service and entertainment venues, with many of the apartments within walking distance.
But over the past two years, interest has grown in building apartment complexes big and small in New Haven’s suburbs and beyond. The latest evidence of that trend is “The Bradley,” a 30-unit apartment complex on Bradley Road in Madison.
July 7, 1866: The East Tennessee Union Flag reported an exhibition would take place at the Fall Branch High School. The event would be on July 13 âif the weather is fair, if not on the following Tuesday. The friends of this Institution and the public generally are respectfully invited to attend.â Z.B. Lockwood was the principal of the Fall Branch High School.
The East Tennessee Union Flag was a newspaper published in Jonesborough, which was spelled that way in 1866.
July 7, 1887: According to The Comet, âCapt. S.T. Harris has purchased the Al Lyle corner, opposite the Hoss House, and as soon as he can get possession will erect a handsome bank building. The building will be fire proof (sic) with marble trimmings and tile floors. It will be used for a national bank.âIn another item The Comet carried that day it was reported, that âCol. T.E. Matson returned yesterday morning from South Carolina. He reports every thing (sic) favorable for Johnson City and says
In CT s red-hot housing market, a dozen bids on a single home isn t unusual darientimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from darientimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
‘Things went gangbusters’: Connecticut housing market soared in second half of 2020
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Homes for sale in the Compo Beach area Thursday December 3, 2020, in Westport, Conn. In a projected seller s market for 2021, few sellers nationally will do better than those in the Greenwich-Bridgeport corridor according to Realtor.com, which is projecting a 7.8 percent increase in home prices amid a continued flight to the suburbs even as vaccines arrive.
Photo: Erik Trautmann / Hearst Connecticut Media
Sales and the median sale price of single-family homes in Connecticut surged in 2020, despite a slump in the second quarter when COVID-19’s economic impact began hitting the state and nation.