The equestrian estate near Chesterfield County Airport was the homestead of Doug and Deborah Hackman, whose business involvements included a proposed water sports park that made headlines a decade ago.
Residential Real Estate
Developer carves out site for 7-story apartment building near Kinsale HQ
Margaret Freund’s Fulton Hill Properties is venturing outside the city for what would be its first development in Henrico, a 253-unit building in the county’s Westwood area.
CCV-area house topped three other $2M home sales in June
The five-bedroom home with four bathrooms and two half-baths sold above its mid-May listing of $2.3 million. It was put under contract in two days.
Riverside home built off of 200-year-old barn hits market for $2.3M
The 13-acre Barnstone estate is on land previously owned by “Breaking Bad” creator Vince Gilligan off Route 5 in Charles City County just across the Henrico line.
Dodson property management arms merging with out-of-town competitors
Namesake and President Duke Dodson will retain a minority stake and Dodson’s 160 local employees will continue on with the combined firms.
Glenwood Golf Club closes after 95 years
The East End course will see its last rounds played as its longtime owners are set to sell the property to a housing developer.
Bases loaded: All three Diamond District finalists meet submission deadline
The city will now move toward picking a winning team for the redevelopment project, which one of the groups projected to cost up to $2 billion.
Region’s first 3D-printed home completed, sold in South Richmond
A collective including Project:HOMES, the Better Housing Coalition, Virginia Housing and a group from Virginia Tech built the house as an experiment in housing affordability.
52-unit apartment building planned near Six Points
Local couple Daniel and McKenzie Payne are making their first go at residential development with a three-story structure at 2906 Fifth Ave.
Scott’s Addition in three parts: The eclectic architecture of a former warehouse district (Guest Commentary)
After World War I, Richmond’s manufacturing and business operations crept west from downtown.