Shopping Guide
Shopping for Side Tables
Side tables are small, but they can have a big impact — if you take a risk and choose something sculptural.
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Side tables are small, but they can have a big impact — if you take a risk and choose something sculptural.
By TIM McKEOUGH
Living above a bar in New York City can be a blessing or a curse.
By RONNIE KOENIG
If a buyer backs out of a contract, the deposit is lost. But what recourse does the buyer have if the seller wants out?
By RONDA KAYSEN
Spring has long been considered the best time to try to sell a home, but with digital marketing, traditional rules seem to matter less.
By JOANNE KAUFMAN
This week’s properties are in Greenwich Village, the Upper West Side and Ditmas Park, Brooklyn.
By MICHELLE HIGGINS
Recent residential sales in New York City and the region.
Compiled by C.J. HUGHES
This week’s properties include a five-bedroom in Bogota, N.J., and a three-bedroom in Fairfield, Conn.
Reported by JILL P. CAPUZZO and LISA PREVOST
After 25 years in the same apartment, Lonny Price finally decided the space needed to grow up.
By JOANNE KAUFMAN
Major metropolitan areas where less than $1,000 a month buys you a median-priced home.
By MICHAEL KOLOMATSKY
A couple in Yonkers decide to downsize and wind up combining three households in Manhattan.
By JOYCE COHEN
Recent development on the waterfront — with striking views and appealing prices — is attracting those who work in New York City.
By JILL P. CAPUZZO
With a recent influx of foreigners, as well as New Zealanders moving to the city for work, the real estate market in Auckland is booming.
By MARCELLE SUSSMAN FISCHLER
An 18th-century farmhouse in Glen Mills, Pa., and midcentury moderns in Chapel Hill, N.C., and Sarasota, Fla.
By MIKE POWELL
The Bronx Music Hall, to be built as part of an affordable housing complex in the Melrose neighborhood, will celebrate the borough’s diverse sounds.
By ELI ROSENBERG
Can I ask my roommates to move out if I’ve been here longer?
By RONDA KAYSEN
For some first-time buyers, renting might actually be cheaper, both in the short- and long-term.
By RONDA KAYSEN
In a dog-friendly co-op, can the board evict a breed with a bad reputation?
By RONDA KAYSEN
A co-op board is responsible for protecting its employees from shareholders behaving badly — even if they’re lawyers (or just litigious).
By RONDA KAYSEN
A co-op has problems with a grocery store that attracts pigeons and rats.
By RONDA KAYSEN