When Florence Celebrates Its Own New Year, Smart Investors Take Notes
Every March 25th, Florence does something no other city in the world bothers to do anymore: it celebrates its own New Year. Not with fireworks or champagne, but with a…
Every March 25th, Florence does something no other city in the world bothers to do anymore: it celebrates its own New Year. Not with fireworks or champagne, but with a…
Italy’s Luxury Market Is No Longer Just About Lifestyle. It's About Legacy.
Milan has never needed an introduction. The city moves at a different pace than the rest of Italy, sharper and more mercantile, with a real estate market that reflects its…
The Jewish Museum of New York's upcoming retrospective on Paul Klee's late work, running March through July 2026, is not simply a cultural event. For anyone who tracks how artistic…
The Americans started arriving quietly. Not the tourists, the buyers. In the past three years, U.S. nationals have become the single largest source of foreign visitors to Florence, close to…
This March, Mozart's own clavichord crossed the Atlantic for the first time. His violin came with it. So did his letters, his portraits, and the intimate debris of a life…
Forty-four hectares of Tuscan countryside. Ninety rooms. A private church. An olive grove that has been producing oil for centuries. And a price that nobody will confirm publicly. The medieval…
Nicolas Cage knows how to find treasure. On screen, anyway. In real life, his record with property has been considerably messier: German and English castles, a New Orleans mansion, a…
Richemont did not buy a building. It bought a statement. When the Swiss luxury conglomerate, parent company to Van Cleef & Arpels, paid $54.5 million for 690 Madison Avenue last…
Start with a number: 29.5%. That is the share of Florentine property listings that qualify as prestige real estate, according to a new analysis by Gruppo Gabetti. No other major…