Mike Sheridan

Mike Sheridan is a freelance writer in Richmond, Virginia.

Boasting an enviable quality of life, strong in-migration, and a vibrant economy powered by technology, aerospace, and other industries, the Pacific Northwest remains one of the America’s real estate sweet spots.
Recovery is still on across the Northeast, including Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania. Expansion in the life sciences and technology sectors, as well as increased transit-oriented development (TOD), is spurring real estate in Boston.
Thanks to demand from the millennial generation and a strengthening economy, real estate development is returning to the Mid-Atlantic region, which includes Washington, D.C.; Virginia; Maryland; and North Carolina.
In the 1970s, Detroit adopted a new nickname: “Renaissance City.” But for Michigan’s largest city, that designation was premature—at least until now.
When Chief Executive magazine this May released its tenth annual survey of best and worst states in which to do business—based on factors including skilled workforce, taxes and regulations, and the quality of the living environment—it was no surprise that Florida, the Carolinas, and Georgia were in the top ten.
Good transportation, affordability, and millennials boost real estate development as the city reinvents itself.
Like a sweltering summer day in the Panhandle, the Texas real estate market is hot. Very hot.
For months, the San Francisco development world has been “aTwitter” about the “technology effect” hitting the region’s real estate markets.
It is envisioned as one of the grandest parties in the Western Hemisphere—the 2016 Olympic Games in Brazil.
Real estate markets are warming in the sunny Southeast. After several years of little activity, development has significantly increased over the past six months.
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