Three townships pause reporting: Our map is sparser than usual this month because, as they did last year, the assessors for Pittsfield, Superior, and Ann Arbor townships have temporarily stopped uploading sales to the state’s database. Pittsfield assessor Warsha Kulkarni emails that they’re waiting till this year’s property tax increase is calculated; we’ll include those sales in future maps.

Grad season brings Tower Plaza sales: If it’s springtime, it must be time for ownership shuffles at the city’s tallest condo at 555 E. William St. This month’s map features six units selling from $205,000 (396 square feet on the tenth floor) to $309,000 (596 square feet on the fourteenth floor) and there are already two more sales that will appear on the June map. The building has long been known for parents buying units for their students to occupy during their time at U-M and then unloading them when they depart. A typical line from these listings: “This is a perfect home for students … or anyone looking for a reasonably priced downtown residence.”

Bristol Ridge sells out fourth building: The long-gestating condo development from Norfolk Homes along Pontiac Tr. south of Dhu Varren Rd. is on the map with three sales that close out another eight-unit block of three-story row houses. That marks the halfway point for the planned eight-building community. Prices have jumped since the first ones sold in March 2023, of course: the first end unit went for $462,581 two years ago; the same model at the end of the fourth building that sold on March 31 had seventy fewer square feet and one less bathroom but nonetheless went for $610,735.

This Old House of the Month: New U-M law dean Neel Sukhatme and his wife bought a storied 121-year-old Dutch Colonial at 1430 Cambridge Ave. in March for $1.24 million. The 6-bedroom, 6-bath, 4,555-square-foot Burns Park abode was built for Eugene B. Hall, a son of Ann Arbor’s leading suffragist Olivia B. Hall, who oversaw the subdivision and sale of her late husband Israel’s vast land holdings on and around S. Forest Ave. in the 1890s. Olivia Ave. is named for her; Cambridge was originally named Israel Hall Ave.

Related: The Many Lives of Burns Park