Not the area you're looking for, but it reflects the bigger trend of skyrocketing prices. Up north in my area (Vilas/Oneida) home prices have soared through the roof due to 2 factors.
1.) A huge migration of former city people (who work from home on the internet and bring their "jobs" with them) moving north has created a big supply/demand shortage of homes for sale. Add to that, the lack of enough competent builders to build homes for people buying vacant land has created the huge demand for everything livable, and a very short supply. Most contractors are booked 3 years out, as are most subs.
2.) The fact that the old family lakeside resort that was the draw of the northwoods has become a thing of the past. The overwhelming majority of them have been split up and the old rental cottages sold off. Meaning there's a lack of places for vacationers to stay at, other than a big motel/hotel in town. That's not what most families want, they want to be on the water, carrying on the family tradition they grew up with. Enter the vrbo/airbnb trend. People have discovered that buying up vacant homes and renting them out by the week for even just half the year, pays the mortgage on it. Now people can have that 2nd home up north that they couldn't afford without the rental income that the vrbo provides. So now there's even less stuff available to buy or rent for anyone who wants to live in it full time that the vrbos haven't snatched up. Most of the vrbo buyers aren't doing it to make an extra income (some investors are), they're doing it solely because it's the only way they can afford that 2nd home up north. They don't want to rent it to strangers, but it's the only way they can afford to buy it.
Its a win - lose for those of us who have been here pre-covid / pre-riots / pre-Bidenflation. It's a 'win' because the skyrocketing prices (and rents) have given us huge equity gains. My house is now worth double what it was 5 years ago. The 'lose' is if I sell it, where will I go? Anything I want to buy has increased drastically also. Another 'lose' is what it will do to the property taxes when assessments catch up to "fair market prices".
Another bad aspect is the influx of work-from-home people is, it has put a huge demand on existing infrastructure and workforce, especially in the business sector. Employers can't find enough help because the newbs bring a good paying, remotely located, job with them... they're not seeking local employment, but they occupy a living space that a locally employed person otherwise would, and they become more "customers" at severely understaffed businesses. New employees are not moving in to fill the employment voids even though wages have risen sharply, as employers fight over existing help with wage hikes, because there aren't any homes for them to buy or rent to live in if they move here. The good side of this is, people already established here, with a place to live at the lower mortgage / rental rates, have seen their incomes go way up, as now they are in high demand and there's a low supply.