New Haven Landlord Seeks Accelerated Rehab for Code Violations
New Haven landlord Jianchao Xu seeks to erase a misdemeanor charge via Accelerated Rehabilitation after his property burned three times in 2026.
The latest real estate news from Connecticut and the Nutmeg State.
New Haven landlord Jianchao Xu seeks to erase a misdemeanor charge via Accelerated Rehabilitation after his property burned three times in 2026.
The Embassy Apartments at 102-116 Dwight Street sold for $5.2 million—$2.2 million above the city's tax appraisal—to East Rock Real Estate's Albert Annunziata.
New Haven's Board of Zoning Appeals unanimously approved a 60-unit apartment project at 97-101 Essex St. despite neighbor objections favoring single-family homes.
Gov. Ned Lamont signed a new affordable housing law in Norwalk on Monday, selecting Fairfield County—one of the nation's most expensive housing markets—as the backdrop for legislation aimed at building more than 100,000 new homes across Connecticut.
Connecticut home sales declined 6.4% in January compared to the same month last year, according to the Connecticut Association of Realtors, outpacing the national decline of 4.4% during the same period.
Connecticut legislators are developing comprehensive tools to address corporate consolidation in the state's housing market, according to a working group established during the 2025 legislative session.
Connecticut's homeless population has grown steadily over the past four years while critical federal funding remains at risk, according to a new analysis that highlights the mounting challenges facing the state's most vulnerable residents.
Connecticut lawmakers are considering legislation that would ban gas-powered leaf blowers statewide and use electric bill surcharges to subsidize the transition to battery-powered equipment.
Connecticut lawmakers are moving to repeal a 2024 law that would have allowed single-stairway exits in some residential buildings, following strong opposition from fire officials across the state.
The Connecticut Museum of Culture and History opened a new exhibition last week that brings Hartford's North End history to life through original graphic novels, according to museum officials.