To live and buy in L.A. [Southern California]

To live and buy in L.A.

More people. Prices stuck in the stratosphere. Vanishing open land. These and other factors give the housing crunch new bite.

If Southern California’s housing market of the last six years were a hit song, owners who have seen their homes double in value would be humming “We’re in the Money.” But for countless others who can’t afford to buy or to pay rising rents, the flip side of the record would be “Desperado.”

Despite political strides — Los Angeles last fall fully funded for the first time a $100-million affordable-housing trust — and the construction of new homes in all price ranges, the region’s persistent housing crisis has only gotten worse, experts say. Record-high home prices, unflagging demand, population growth, lack of developable land, sky-high land and building costs and government regulations have exacerbated the situation.

Neighborhoodtimes: 193 more apartments to go condo [South Florida]

Neighborhoodtimes: 193 more apartments to go condo

The rental market is about to get a little tighter with the sale of a west-side apartment complex that will soon go condo.

Fifth Avenue Apartments, at 5675 Fifth Ave. N, sold in the last two weeks for $16.5-million. The 193 units are still rentals, but the new owners, Vision 193, indicate that they intend to convert the newly renovated apartments to condos.

North Pointe drops policies [South Florida]

North Pointe drops policies [South Florida]

North Pointe, a large commercial insurer, is pulling back its exposure in Florida, dropping about 40 percent of its policies.

Already on edge as this year’s hurricane season gets under way, the state’s insurance market is about to get another shock.

North Pointe Holdings, a large commercial insurance company, said Friday that it plans to drop about 40 percent of its policies in Florida. The reasons it cited were windstorm risk and rapidly increasing reinsurance prices — both key contributors to the state’s escalating insurance crisis.

Last house on Singer Island’s condo-laden beachfront isn’t for sale — at any price [South Florida]

Last house on Singer Island’s condo-laden beachfront isn’t for sale — at any price [South Florida]

John Shillingburg’s slice of paradise is exactly that — 50 feet wide, 400 feet long, from Intracoastal to Atlantic, the only single-family house perched on the island’s oceanfront.

And no, it’s not for sale, at any price.

The modest 2,900-square-foot house sits atop the sand dune, surrounded by dense foliage, invisible from the road, sandwiched between towering condos. This has been Shillingburg’s hideaway for almost 40 years.