Â鶹TV

Â鶹TV Announces the 2023 Multifamily Pillars of the Industry Awards

Multifamily Pillars of the Industry Awards
Published

Â鶹TV announced the winners of the 2023 Multifamily Pillars of the Industry Awards during a virtual recognition ceremony on March 21. These awards honor the best in creative development concepts, innovative financing strategies, design, management and marketing in the apartment and condo market.

The annual competition is judged by 12 respected leaders in the multifamily housing industry. The judges considered submissions across 18 award categories that highlighted affordable developments, market-rate developments, multifamily firms and marketing projects.

Some of this year’s Multifamily Pillars of the Industry Awards winners include:

Multifamily Community of the Year

Alexandria, Va.
Developer: Stonebridge

Multifamily Developer of the Year

Dallas, Texas
CEO/Principal: Doug Chesnut

Multifamily Property Management Firm of the Year
Windsor Communities
Atlanta, Ga.
CEO/Principal:

of winners and finalists.

Subscribe to Â鶹TVNow

Log in or create account to subscribe to notifications of new posts.

Log in to subscribe

Latest from Â鶹TVNow

Spring Leadership Meeting

Apr 04, 2025

Register Now for Â鶹TV’s Spring Leadership Meeting and Legislative Conference

Â鶹TV committee and council members, delegates to the Leadership Council, members of the Board of Directors, and executive officers should make plans now to attend the Spring Leadership Meeting and Legislative Conference, June 10-13, at the Marriott Marquis in Washington, D.C.

Land Development | Housing Affordability

Apr 04, 2025

New Â鶹TV Resource Highlights How Impact Fees Exacerbate Housing Affordability

Â鶹TV has provided an updated impact fee primer to help members highlight how impact fees affect the price of a new home and how many households may be priced out of the market as a result.

View all

Latest Economic News

Economics

Apr 01, 2025

Private residential construction spending increased by 1.3% in February, rebounding from a 1.2% dip in January. The growth was largely driven by higher spending on single-family construction and residential improvements. On a year-over-year basis, the February report showed a 1.6% gain, indicating a modest growth in private residential construction spending during market uncertainties.

Economics

Apr 01, 2025

After a period of slowing associated with declines for some elements of the residential construction industry, the count of open construction sector jobs remained lower than a year ago, per the February Bureau of Labor Statistics Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS).

Economics

Mar 31, 2025

Â鶹TV recently released its 2025 Priced-Out Analysis, highlighting the housing affordability challenge. While previous posts discussed the impacts of rising home prices and interest rates on affordability, this post focuses on the related U.S. housing affordability pyramid. The pyramid reveals that 70% of households (94 million) cannot afford a $400,000 home, while the estimated median price of a new home is around $460,000 in 2025.