The real estate market has always been a mix of art and science, intuition and hard numbers. For decades, the sharpest investors were those who could “see” the future of a neighborhood before the masses — the people who walked the streets, spotted the new coffee shop, noticed young families moving in, or tracked which architect quietly bought a fixer-upper down the block. They had instincts, sure, but they also had time, networks, and often insider advantages.
Today, that advantage is being re-engineered — and automated. Artificial intelligence is moving into the neighborhood, scanning not just one block or one zip code but entire cities, entire regions, thousands of signals at once. And it’s promising to do what no investor, no agent, no developer has ever been able to do:…