(She was previously a reporter at The Courier-Journal of Louisville and The Star-Ledger of Newark. Nikita, a child of Texas and Kentucky, has been a force at The Times since her arrival from The Washington Post, where she covered city government and wrote a series of investigative articles on campaign fraud. There she’ll help reinvent coverage of a subject that deeply captivates our audience and offers a real chance to see it grow. That’s why I am thrilled to announce that Nikita Stewart, who joined The Times in 2014 as a reporter and who was promoted to assistant editor in Metro six years later, is moving into the Culture and Lifestyle department as our new Real Estate editor. As the nation slowly limps out of the pandemic in a halting economy, forever wondering if now is the time to buy, re-fi, sell, rent or hold, Real Estate stories are a crucial line of reporting for our newsroom. ![]() They allow us to dream, and to act on those dreams, or to understand why we cannot or should not act on those dreams at this particular moment. These stories inspire us to move or not to move. They are about bedrooms and bathrooms and what they might become, about glorious views and great possibilities. They are about communities, generational wealth and income inequality. Real Estate stories are about governments and banks, about beauty in the built and natural environment, about fashion and design, about insurance, about incredible lamps. ![]() Real Estate stories are stories of people: of fantasists and regular folks, of visionaries, of gardeners and artists and architects and debt merchants and lawyers and agents, of all those who thrill to the hunt. ![]() The business and culture of Real Estate is the business and culture of civilization itself: where we live, where we want to live, what makes that difficult, what makes that possible, what makes that joyous.
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