This was me when I got my first crib.
Stunting on them hoes lol
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Southern boomtown collapses into housing hell
Once a pandemic boomtown where people could work remotely from the ocean, a Southern city has transformed into a housing market nightmare.www.dailymail.co.uk
This was me when I got my first crib.
Stunting on them hoes lol
@DC_Dude - "Let it be known. I am officially a homeowner. Bring on the ho, ho, heaux ... there's not a moment to waste!"
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Top 10 least affordable housing markets and their house price-to-income ratios
- Hong Kong 14.4
- Sydney 13.8
- San Jose, California 12.1
- Vancouver, Canada 11.8
- Los Angeles 11.2
- Adelaide, Australia 10.9
- Honolulu 10.8
- San Francisco 10
- Melbourne, Australia 9.7
- San Diego, California 9.5
I'd check those floodplane maps before I'll consider.Abandoned NYC airport will land 3,000 new homes, Mayor Eric Adams announces in ‘housing week’ kickoff
The marshy, abandoned Flushing Airport site in College Point, Queens will land 3,000 new homes under a plan announced Monday by Mayor Eric Adams. Construction is expected to begin in 2028, with New York City Building Trades unions providing both labor and pension fund dollars to finance the project, officials said.
By Hannah Fierick and Matt Troutman
July 28, 2025
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Abandoned NYC airport will land 3,000 new homes, Mayor Eric Adams announces in ‘housing week’ kickoff
The marshy, abandoned Flushing Airport site in College Point, Queens will land 3,000 new homes under a plan announced Monday by Mayor Eric Adams.nypost.com
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The 80-acre site has been abandoned for 40 years and largely reverted to wetlands.
Damn I didn't even think homes were going for that much in the MidWest....Seems way overpriced and why build next to a train track??
This can not be one of the major home builders
I remember druing the height of COVID and remote working, there were all these stories of people moving to these bumfuck towns in flyover country (the large, but sparsely populated states like Idaho/Wyoming/Montana/Dakotas etc...) due to lower cost of living and wanting to get out of crowded cities.
I'm sure once they got out there and the reality of being relatively isolated in the middle of nowhere and long travels just to get to essential stores/gas stations, along with the return to the office movement, many of those people returned close to where they came from or to areas closer to big cities. I'd be interested in knowing relocation trends of the Covid years to the recent couple of years of how many people are returning to the larger states and close to cities.