The Wall Street Journal - 06.03.2020

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THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. Friday, March 6, 2020 |M1


choice of a close-in suburb with a
short commute, willingness to
trade size and space for a walk-
able area, and rejection of tradi-
tional sleepy suburban landscapes
are classics of their age cohort.
The only way in which they differ:
Their brown-shingled house
needed a small amount of renova-
tion, they said, something many of
their contemporaries abhor. These
generational habits are so perva-
sive that they are anointing new
areas as ultraluxury spots and
sending some previously desirable
locations into a downward price
spiral.
This group’s preference for
move-in-ready homes is also shift-
ing the burden of fixing up older
homes onto sellers, and giving
rise to new business models for
real-estate brokerages and home
builders.
Unlike members of their gener-
ation who can’t buy houses be-
cause of student debt and slow-
to-build careers, some do have the
Please turn to page M8

MANSION

Love for Paint
Larry Poons
remembers the
girl that inspired
his art.M14

$8.5 Million
Estate owned by
former Goldman
co-chair lists.
M16

HOMES|MARKETS|PEOPLE|REDOS|SALES

The Secret


In Boston’s


Basement


Rotted pilings left a legacy of
hidden threats to the priciest
real estate in this red-hot market

IN 2011,developer Koby Kempel
paid $2.5 million for a red brick,
former carriage house in Boston’s
coveted Beacon Hill, one of the pric-
iest neighborhoods in the country.
Famed for its cobblestone streets
and historic row houses, Beacon Hill
has been home to former Secretary
of State John Kerry and many other
notable Bostonians over the years.
When Mr. Kempel bought the
circa-1900 house on Beaver Place,
Please turn to page M12

BYCANDACETAYLOR

The Rise of the New Urbanists


Younger luxury buyers prefer move-in ready homes in walkable locations, desire parks over big yards and love the color gray


W


hen Reny Huel-
skamp, 34, and
her husband
Paul Huelskamp,
36, decided to
move out of their San Francisco
rental and buy their first home,
they were drawn to Mill Valley,
Calif., about 20 minutes from San
Francisco. In May, they closed on
a $2 million, roughly 2,000-
square-foot house with a pool
about a block from a lively town
square.
“If you grab coffee at the coffee
spot downtown, there’s a palpable
sense of community,” said Mr.
Huelskamp, a developer of solar
and wind power plants. “You’ll see
tons of young families, with their
kids and dogs.”
The Huelskamps didn’t set out
to be poster children for Wealthy
Millennial Home Buyers, but in
fact their choices nearly perfectly
represent what agents say are the
trends for this age group. Their

BYKATYMCLAUGHLIN

ALANNA HALE FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL (3)

$2
MILLION
2,000 sq. ft,
a block from Mill
Valley’s lively town
square

Reny and Paul Huelskamp, right, in their Mill Valley, Calif., home. They left a rental in San Francisco to buy their first home in a suburb with a sense of place that was near the city.

TONY LUONG FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
Goethe-Institut Boston recently repaired its pilings. It is surrounded by private residences.


Goethe-Institut
on Beacon Street
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