The Clark County Commission voted 7-0 to deny a 575-home subdivision map in Coyote Springs, blocking a step in the development process that’s needed to enable home construction.
Housing
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A project to construct more than 400 single-family homes on Blue Diamond Hill near Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area can move forward.
The typical rent in the Las Vegas-area last month was just over $1,890, up 8 percent from a year earlier, compared with a 25 percent year-over-year rent hike in August of 2021.
Gov. Steve Sisolak and Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo discussed water, affordable housing and development.
Builders logged 434 net sales in July, the fourth consecutive monthly drop and the lowest since the onset of the pandemic.
The directive was released Wednesday. It came after a Review-Journal story showed residents worried about housing insecurity with plans to end the Neighborhood Stabilization Program.
Nevada HAND receives 2,000 calls a day from people seeking affordable housing and only has a “handful” of vacancies in its 4,700-unit portfolio, the president and CEO said.
Spanning more than half the size of Summerlin, a sprawling ranch property in Northern Nevada has hit the market for $100 million.
The Interim Finance Committee voted to allocate the first half of a $500 million investment in affordable housing that Gov. Steve Sisolak announced in February.
The garden-style complex will feature a 3,000-square-foot clubhouse, a fitness center, a dog park, a playground and a pool area with cabanas.
With land prices accelerating in Las Vegas, homebuilders are increasingly eyeing rural communities sprinkled around Southern Nevada for potential new projects.
An Iraq war veteran and double amputee was welcomed into his custom-built Las Vegas home Saturday.
Our interactive graphic shows the Las Vegas Valley’s building growth by decade, and what the population might look like in 2060. More than 2.3 million people live here now.
Solar panels have become normalized among landscapes, spotted everywhere from the open spaces of deserts to rooflines of dense residential areas.
You may be able to blow a ton of money in Las Vegas, but Nevada homeowners don’t have to roll the dice on real estate taxes.