Louisville real estate finished the year with a bang
Insider Louisville
By TRE PRYOR
Both Louisville new construction and existing home sales increased in 2015. In fact, we were just 210 sales away from breaking the all-time record.
Insider Louisville
By TRE PRYOR
Both Louisville new construction and existing home sales increased in 2015. In fact, we were just 210 sales away from breaking the all-time record.
By TRE PRYOR | January 5, 2016 6:00 am
I find it fun each year to stop and take a look back and see how our Louisville real estate market fared. There’s so many different vantage points from which to choose.
Louisville Business First
Dec 23, 2015, 11:44am EST
David Serchuk Reporter
2015 was a good year to sell a home.
Louisville’s residential real estate markets saw strong growth across most major sectors,

Louisville hasn’t had snow yet this winter, but snow or no, winter may be the optimal time for homeowners to sell. | Creative Commons
In the winter, Louisville’s housing market is less competitive, and buyers tend to be more “aggressive and determined,” according to Greg Taylor,
Check out this story on courier-journal.com
Germantown residents and developers speak about how modern changes mix with tradition.
Bailey Loosemore Neighborhoods
@bloosemore
Vintage Christmas lights hanging outside a two-bedroom shotgun house on Samuel Street are the first small clues hinting at a new life inside.
Since May — when owners Laurel Sims-Stewart and Justin Stewart,
2015 tracking towards most homes sold in nine years
Ben Lane
December 3, 2015 6:16PM
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home price growthHome price indexhome price indexeshome price recoveryRealtyTrac
For more than a third of the nation’s major metro areas,
October 27, 2015

A huge swath of Dixie Highway, from Broadway to the Gene Snyder Freeway, soon will be transformed into a modern, safer, more pedestrian-friendly corridor, thanks to a $16.9 million federal grant announced today by U.S. Rep.
Washington, D.C. – Builder confidence in the market for newly constructed single-family homes rose three points in October to a level of 64 on the National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI).
This month’s reading is a return to HMI levels seen at the end of the housing boom in late 2005.