H
ere is the rewritten text:
In Seneca County, a house on Troy Street sold for $167,500, making it the most expensive residential real estate sale between December 7 and 20. Seven sales were recorded during this period, averaging $109,320 per property. The average price per square foot was $73.
Here are the top seven sales:
1. $168K, single-family home at 38 Troy Street: This house in Seneca Falls has a living area of 1,751 square feet and sold for $96 per square foot.
2. $151K, single-family residence at 46 Seneca Road: The detached house on Seneca Road in Seneca Falls has 1,352 square feet of living space and sold for $112 per square foot.
3. $125K, single-family house at 3653 Cayuga Street: This Covert property features a 944-square-foot home that sold for $132 per square foot.
4. $91K, single-family house at 16 Spring Street: The 1,770-square-foot house on Spring Street in Seneca Falls sold for $51 per square foot.
5. $81K, single-family home at 26 Seneca Road: This detached house on Seneca Road in Seneca Falls has 1,271 square feet of living space and sold for $64 per square foot.
6. $75K, single-family residence at 104 E. Main Street: The property on Main Street in Waterloo features a 1,944-square-foot home that sold for $39 per square foot.
7. $75K, manufactured home at 4677 Kings Corners Road: This Varick property has a living area of 1,440 square feet and sold for $52 per square foot.
Real Estate Newswire provides data analysis using machine learning to generate insights from Propmix, an aggregator of national real-estate data.
realestate
Top 7 Luxury Sales in Seneca County Real Estate, December 2023
Seneca Falls home sells for $167,500, top price in Seneca County December sales.
Read More - realestate
realestate
Brown & Riding Names New Real Estate Practice Head
Veteran leader with industry expertise and regional insight
Read More - realestate
realestate
LA's affluent neighborhoods face gentrification threat from investors
Fires may exacerbate LA's affordability crisis, pricing out low-income residents and making the area exclusive to the wealthy.
Read More
realestate
LA's affluent neighborhoods face gentrification threat from investors
Fires may exacerbate LA's affordability crisis, pricing out low-income residents and making the area exclusive to the wealthy.