Will the Inner Sunset’s inner subset see its fortunes up or down? Redfin predicted rising values in Oakland earlier this year, but not every prediction pans out.
Friday is time for the High & the Low, a Curbed column chronicling the most and least expensive homes sold in San Francisco in the last seven days. Here’s this week’s pageant of extremes.
Welcome to Curbed Comparisons, a regular column exploring what you can rent for a set dollar amount in different neighborhoods. Is one person's studio another person's townhouse? Let's find out. Today's price: $2,500.
The unabashedly contemporary home, completed in 2013, at 1762 12th Avenue features oversized windows, a flexible floor plan, soaring ceilings, and other new accents sure to please those who eschew the past.
While not nearly as biblical as forecasted, this weekend’s California storm unleashed a good amount of rain and wind upon the Bay Area. Anywhere from 3 to five inches of rain was predicted for San Francisco, but received a reported 2.3 inches.
Welcome to Curbed Comparisons, a regular column exploring what you can rent for a set dollar amount in different neighborhoods. Is one person's studio another person's townhouse? Let's find out. Today's price: $3,000.
From Union Square down to the Excelsior, there are only so many rentals in the city to go around. Fortunately, you only need one, and we've got five to compare.
Even the guy who penned the report is surprised, but he says the numbers agree, and there is some logic behind it. Buyers want single family homes in San Francisco, and sooner or later they'll gravitate toward where they are.
Originally offered as a pair with the nearby home for $3.09 million, but the Jazz Age-era brick shack and empty property wasn't nearly as desirable. The old structure isn't yet a protected resource, but buyers might not want to tempt fate.
Today’s offering is at 1345 16th Avenue in the Inner Sunset, inside a stunning 1924 building. Featuring one bed, one bath, and 800 square feet, this is one downright darling TIC.
The price of five bedrooms in the Sunset gets you four in the Richmond, three in the Haight, and two in South Beach, but which one is really worth the $72,000 a year?
In the quickest of quick flips, this 1927 number with attached tower is back on the market less than two months after it last sold, and for the exact same price.
Latest housing balance report shows that BMR development just can't keep up with the ferocious pace of new building in the city. The Tenderloin is doing its best, while the Sunset is falling shockingly short.
Is it a mirage? Or maybe a miracle from on high? This Sunset house with an unassuming exterior has a startlingly charming interior, and its price has barely budged in the last decade. In fact, in dollar value, it's cheaper now than it was in 2005.