But if you’ve been to a bank (if you still use a literal brick and mortar bank) you can tell the second you step in the door that something is wrong. Very wrong.
I love the Pacific Northwest. But if you look at a map, you don’t always get what you see.
Sixth Alder is a workable (and appealing) contribution to our multi-faceted and ever-more complicated housing situation.
For better or worse our homes and neighborhoods — and those who live within the margins in their tarps and shelters — define to visitors and residents alike — who we are and what we value.
The city has a more than a few gems tucked among the clutter.
Your mom will love you no matter what. The market, or any sector of it, is not so forgiving.
America has always loved its hucksters and con-men (and women). In fact, one article described this ever-thriving industry the “American fantasy-industrial complex.”
When it comes to housing in the 2020s, it is very simple; it’s complicated.
I don’t know about anyone else, but even after just one month, 2024 is feeling like a long, long year already.
We are at a crucial point in our identity and history, and some of us are poised to make the best and fullest use of these truly unprecedented times.
In a previous age, people actually did things — without cameras or digital devices of any kind.
In the era of alternative facts, what many of us had known as “news” — reliable, authoritative and uncontested — evaporated before many of us even noticed.
The day to day, lived reality of the kids today is alien to the previous several generations, if not all of humanity.