Curbed Comparisons is a weekly column that explores what one can rent or buy for a set dollar amount in the Boston area. Is one woman’s studio another woman’s townhouse? Let’s find out!
The sum is not all that astronomical for the Boston housing market. What does this relatively modest tag bring? Our latest Curbed Comparisons romps through five different neighborhoods to find out.
The sum is not all that astronomical an amount in the Boston housing market. The good news, though, is that it does buy quite a bit of the good real estate life around the city
Welcome to Curbed Comparisons, a weekly column that explores what one can rent or buy for a set dollar amount in the Boston area. Is one woman’s studio another woman’s townhouse? Let’s find out! This week, the magic number is $750,000 in Boston.
Curbed Comparisons is a weekly column that explores what one can rent or buy for a set amount (or thereabouts) in the Boston area. Is one woman’s studio another woman’s townhouse? Let’s find out! Today, the magic number is $550,000.
Welcome to Curbed Comparisons, a weekly column that explores what one can rent or buy for a set dollar amount (or thereabouts) in the Boston area. Is one woman’s studio another woman’s townhouse? Let’s find out!
Welcome to Curbed Comparisons, a weekly column that explores what one can rent or buy for a set dollar amount (or thereabouts) in the Boston area. Is one woman’s studio another woman’s townhouse? Let’s find out!
The city is probably one of a handful in America where $4,000 a month isn’t that much money to rent a place. What does the hefty sum command as summer slides to fall?
It should be no surprise that in Boston such a sum is a pretty busy price point in the rental market. What’s it command toward the end of August? Our latest Curbed Comparisons finds out.
It’s not too late to enjoy the last bits of warmth this year in one of these gobsmacking selections in Southie. Be warned, though: They start at $1.2 million.
The site of the neighborhood’s oldest bar and restaurant is up for sale, and the likeliest replacements include an office building or a life sciences complex.
While not a small amount, $3,500 is one of the busier price points in the Thunderdome that is the city’s rental market. Here’s what it commands in enclaves such as Dorchester and Beacon Hill.
The sum is quite a busy price point in Boston’s Thunderdome of a rental market. What’s it lease right now? Let’s find out in our latest Curbed Comparisons.
The sum is not that much for Boston—though nationally it can be quite the price tag. What does it command in the city? Our latest Curbed Comparisons finds out.
The sum is actually not that extraordinarily high for Southie these days—when it’s penciled out to its square-foot cost. Plus, look at that outdoor space.
Last week, we toured East Boston to see what was on the shores on that side of Boston Harbor. This week, we head south, to South Boston specifically, to see what’s available on the other side.
The spread also includes touches such as central air, in-unit W/D, and a private backyard. What say you re: the price? Take a look and then take your best guess.
Boston is one of the few cities in America where $3,500 a month isn’t that much in rent. What does the sum get you as winter (finally!) fades to spring?
The average price for a market-rate home in Southie—excluding Fort Point and the Seaport District—was $747 a square foot as of mid-March. That’s just the average, though.