The national housing market is stuck in a post-pandemic rut.
Prices and interest rates have stalled out at unaffordable highs, keeping buyers at bay. Sellers, unable to fetch the
Santa Monica has emerged as the second most expensive rental market in the Los Angeles metropolitan area, with one-bedroom apartments commanding a median rent of $2,900, according to
Months after wildfires devastated large portions of Pacific Palisades, a slow but determined push to rebuild is beginning to reshape the charred hillsides and fractured neighborhoods. At the center of
Developers have submitted plans to replace a two‑story office building at 3205 Ocean Park Ave with a seven‑story mixed‑use project.
The existing 1970s structure would be demolished
Santa Monica is offering up more than eight acres of city-owned land to developers, launching a formal search for long-term lessees to help meet the city’s state-
A decade-spanning political battle between housing developers and defenders of California’s preeminent environmental law likely came to an end with only a smattering of “no” votes.
The forces
California has entered the final phase of construction on what will become the world's largest wildlife crossing, a groundbreaking project designed to save mountain lions and other species
The Santa Monica Planning Commission has unanimously approved a development agreement amendment that will allow the RAND Corporation to expand commercial uses at its underutilized headquarters building at 1776 Main
Construction has reached its highest point at 501 Broadway, where developer Tishman Speyer is building an eight-story, mixed-use complex that is set to deliver nearly 90 new apartments
The Santa Monica Planning Commission unanimously approved a controversial 18-story residential tower, rejecting an appeal that challenged the project on environmental grounds while expressing frustration that the appeal was
Tova Capital Inc., a Los Angeles real estate investment firm, has partnered with Shopton Capital to purchase a 7,500-square-foot retail building in downtown Santa Monica for $5.
The Santa Monica Architectural Review Board will consider an eight-story residential development Monday that would bring 132 housing units to a highly visible site near the downtown Metro station