Why zoning is now a hot topic in Princeton
Just glance at Princeton’s new zoning code, and you will notice at least one major change. Interspersed between the usual pages of dry, bulleted text, are colorful house diagrams — more like an architect’s sketchbook than your average zoning handbook.
The Landaus, Princeton’s ‘Wool Family,’ to retire
After 106 years — through two World Wars, evolving fashions, and technological leaps in how people do their shopping — it’s a global pandemic that might finally stop “the little shop that could”
History for sale on Winant Road in Princeton: Pyne Mansion on the market
What will $5 million buy you? Right now in Princeton it could buy the Pyne Mansion
Princeton Zoning Board nixes proposed duplex
Owner-occupancy requirement at the heart of disagreement, rulings
Princeton Theological Seminary in need of redevelopment? Yes, and it could be win-win
Proponents of “Non-Condemnation Area in Need of Redevelopment” say statutes provide welcome alternative to a normally cumbersome zoning process
Princeton Real Estate: Town plans for a more walkable Witherspoon
Princeton Council has entered into an agreement with traffic engineering firm McMahon Associates to conduct a study on three possible options for the area between Nassau and Spring streets
A 21st century twist for 18th century homes: see Princeton’s “Green Oval” digital tours on...
The Historical Society of Princeton is turning to 21st-century technology to help preserve and share Princeton’s 18th-century history
Neighbors say no way to new Princeton homes
Lanwin Development seeks to build 30 homes on part of a 90-acre tract it owns on the Princeton Ridge. The entrance to the development would be off Herrontown Road
Recent Princeton real estate transactions
The following listings of residential home sales are based on public records and tax files. The number in parentheses after the closing price indicates the amount it was above...
Alexander House, a historic Princeton home, has a new mission
The Alexander House, located on the Princeton Theological Seminary campus at 58 Mercer St., was constructed in 1819 for co-founder and first professor Archibald Alexander