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Real Estate Blog

Real Estate News and Updates

5 Tips To Avoid Personal Finance Trouble When Buying A Home

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Fed announces interest-rate decision

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Denver vs. Charlotte: How the Super Bowl 50 cities match up (Slideshow)

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Three Nashvillians have been named to a national list of notable commercial real estate executives.

The Business Journals’ Influencers: Commercial Real Estate spotlights 100 executives impacting real estate and development in their respective communities. These 100 executives represent both large, nationally recognized firms and smaller, family-owned businesses. Some are long-tenured executives while others have found success relatively early in their careers. And while some might be familiar…

A second Dayton-area location of a popular taco restaurant may soon open in Beavercreek.

The master developer of a major adaptive-reuse project north of uptown says it has formed a joint venture with a real estate firm based in San Francisco to work on the redevelopment.

New York-based ATCO Properties & Management is now in a joint venture with Shorenstein Properties, a privately-owned real estate company with a portfolio in excess of 22 million square feet and valued at $7.8 billion, at Camp North End, a 75-acre overhaul of former warehouses into modern commercial space. ATCO said…

It’s no secret that Montgomery County has seen slower economic growth in recent years, in large part due to contraction in federal employment.

But a new report by Baltimore-based Sage Policy Group released Friday morning shows just how bad it's gotten, with the report's author using stark words to illustrate the problems.

“The level of underperformance is shocking,” said Sage CEO Anirban Basu. “It's shockingly slow for a county that is so educated, that is so well situated and home to the…

Evon Smith, president and CEO of OneWest, and Lee Weyland, director of leasing and branding for Weyland Ventures, have been selected to a national list of notable commercial real estate executives.

The Business Journals’ Influencers: Commercial Real Estate spotlights 100 executives having an influence on real estate and development in their respective communities. These 100 executives represent large, nationally recognized firms and smaller, family-owned businesses. Some are long-tenured executives,…

Last summer, an investment banking tycoon brought his real estate nonprofit to Memphis.

Today, the impact from that program is still being felt by one Central High School graduate.

Founded in 2016 by Cedric Bobo and Fred Greene, Project Destined teaches minority teenagers how to invest in real estate through a multiday program. It culminates with students making real bids on properties. If the offers are accepted, Bobo writes a check, and a portion of profits generated from those properties —…

“We’re looking at multiple deals where a year or two years ago, we had very little activity.”

Duane Howell, The Denver PostA view of Writer Square on June 22, 1981.A grand jury has indicted the former owner of downtown Denver’s Writer Square for allegedly masterminding a complex real-estate scheme that landed him enough cash to travel on private jets, gamble in Las Vegas, and run up tabs at liquor stores and with credit card companies.

The nine-count felony indictment against Gary Dragul, 55, of Cherry Hills Village, alleges he committed securities fraud through his company, GDA Real Estate Services, which was part-owner of Writer Square until 2013.

Although Attorney General Cynthia Coffman said Dragul allegedly ran his scam as far back as 2007, the indictment handed up by a state grand jury involves only conduct since 2013. Though never licensed to deal in securities in Colorado, Dragul allegedly failed to tell his latest investors of troubles he had with investors from his 2007 venture, in which funds were used to buy and manage commercial real estate ventures and shopping ..

Denver rents are going up, but if the city lands Amazon’s second headquarters, the impact on rents will be greater here than in any of the other 19 cities competing for HQ2, according to a report released Thursday by real estate market researcher Zillow.

Zillow estimates that Denver’s median rents, currently around $2,047 a month, will rise 3.6 percent next year even without Amazon and its 50,000 jobs for a future campus. But should the city be picked, rents will increase an additional 2.3 percent, said Zillow. That translates to about an extra $1,452 a year in rent payments.

“While the prospect of 50,000 new jobs is no trivial matter for any city, the home to Amazon’s second headquarters likely won’t experience the kind of dramatic boost in rents Amazon helped fuel in Seattle,” Zillow senior economist Aaron Terrazas said in a statement. “Nashville and Denver are the only two metros that could see a greater boost to rents due to Amazon than Seattle has seen.”

Amazon HQ2 would have a..