Newstral
Article
Star Tribune on 2017-06-16 10:35
Twin Cities needs nearly 71,000 apartments by 2030 to keep up with demand
Related news
- Rising mortgage rates increase demand for apartments in Twin CitiesStar Tribune
- Rising mortgage rates help boost demand for Twin Cities apartmentsStar Tribune
- Demand for apartments outpaces supply in Twin Citiesfinance-commerce.com
- Pandemic spurs demand in Twin Cities for backyard chickensStar Tribune
- Pandemic revs up demand for scooters in Twin CitiesStar Tribune
- Twin Cities micro apartments put to the test during the pandemicStar Tribune
- 6,000 new apartments in Twin Cities pipelinefinance-commerce.com
- Ranks of million-dollar condos have tripled in Twin Cities amid 'robust' demandStar Tribune
- Apartment demand remains high in the Twin Cities, as new construction shifts to suburbsStar Tribune
- Twin Cities hospital workers call out racism, demand change from employersStar Tribune
- Twin Cities apartment vacancy declines, demand improvesfinance-commerce.com
- Twin Cities apartment demand better than expectedfinance-commerce.com
- Shared spaces take starring role in Twin Cities apartments, condosStar Tribune
- Milwaukee developers eye conversion of Twin Cities hotel into apartmentsbizjournals.com
- Twin Cities builders turn attention from apartments to new homesStar Tribune
- Twin Cities developer buys vintage Milwaukee building; will build apartmentsbizjournals.com
- Twin Cities firm proposes affordable senior living apartments in Wauwatosabizjournals.com
- MLG Capital buys Twin Cities area apartments for $65 millionbizjournals.com
- Medtronic eliminating some Twin Cities jobs in favor of contractorStar Tribune
- Twin Cities malls are being transformed into town centersStar Tribune