Commercial
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March 17, 2025
Brookfield Offloads Steeply Discounted NYC Office For $150M
Brookfield Properties took a significant hit on the sale of a Manhattan office building, with county property records showing Monday that it sold 333 W. 34th St. for $150 million after purchasing the midtown building for $255 million.
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March 17, 2025
Fraud Victims Claim CRE Fintech Firm Skirted Securities Law
A group of investors pointed to a recent fraud case in seeking to claw back more than $1 billion raised by fintech firm CrowdStreet, claiming in a proposed class action filed in Texas federal court that the platform operated outside state and federal financial regulations for a decade.
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March 17, 2025
Paul Hastings Guides Artemis From Founding To Takeover
When Paul Hastings partner Joshua H. Sternoff was initially pitched on repping Debbie Harmon and Penny Pritzker in creating the first women-owned real estate investment business, he thought it was a bet worth taking. About 16 years and several fundraising cycles later, Sternoff and others at Paul Hastings steered Artemis Real Estate Partners through what might be its biggest move yet.
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March 17, 2025
Burr & Forman Vet Sees Bright Spot For Office Amid Clouds
Burr & Forman LLP partner Brad Skidmore talks to Law360 Real Estate Authority about why he expects growth for the office real estate market despite a recent atmosphere of gloom and doom over the sector.
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March 17, 2025
Belkin Burden Hires Tax Exemption, Zoning Experts
Belkin Burden & Goldman LLP announced Monday it has added five new attorneys from Seiden & Schein PC who will form the firm's new tax exemptions and zoning incentives department.
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March 17, 2025
NYC Real Estate Week In Review
DLA Piper and Klestadt Winters are among the law firms that landed work on the top New York City real estate deals to hit public records last week, with a pair of Manhattan trades topping the list.
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March 17, 2025
DC Commercial Property Taxable Values Drop Nearly 8%
Commercial property values in Washington, D.C., dropped 7.87% in their 2025 assessments compared with a year earlier, the district's tax office said.
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March 14, 2025
Judge Hands Landlord Win In Maryland Nurse's Eviction Case
A Maryland federal judge mostly sided with a landlord that was hit with a nurse practitioner's $1 million suit, which alleged that the landlord wrongfully locked her out of her place of business when she wasn't there and evicted her.
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March 14, 2025
Calif. Insurance Chief OKs State Farm Rates Pending Hearing
The California Department of Insurance on Friday provisionally approved State Farm's request for an emergency rate hike following the Los Angeles fires, including a nearly 22% increase for homeowners, saying final approval will be contingent on the insurer justifying its request at a hearing.
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March 14, 2025
Property Plays: Buffalo, Swerdlow Group, Tampa Bay Rays
Property Plays is a weekly roundup of the latest loans, leases, sales and projects around the country. Send your tips — all confidential — to realestate@law360.com.
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March 14, 2025
Demand Tightens Florida Land Market In '24, Broker Finds
Large-acreage land transactions and institutional investors drove much of the activity in Florida's land market in 2024, with agricultural land transforming into residential, solar or other development as the state's population grows.
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March 14, 2025
Calif. Tribe Looks To Defend Casino Land Trust Decision
A California tribe at the crux of an Interior Department decision to take 221 acres of trust land for the construction of its casino development wants to intervene in a challenge to the order, saying it and the federal agency have different goals in dismissing the dispute.
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March 14, 2025
Under The Radar: Bankruptcy News You May Have Missed
Avon's international unit asked a bankruptcy judge to extend the window during which only it can propose a Chapter 11 plan, consulting firm Azzur Group Holdings asked the Delaware bankruptcy court to approve its Chapter 11 plan disclosures and allow it to hold a vote, and Philadelphia's University of the Arts proposed selling a property for nearly $7 million. These are some of the bankruptcy stories you may have missed in the last week.
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March 14, 2025
Related Ross Begins Fla. Commercial Office Towers Project
Related Ross has started construction on two Class AA commercial office towers that will take up almost 1 million square feet combined in downtown West Palm Beach, Florida, the developer announced.
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March 14, 2025
3 Firms Rep Franklin BSP Realty Trust's $425M NewPoint Buy
Hogan Lovells, Reed Smith and Paul Weiss guided Franklin BSP Realty Trust's $425 million acquisition of commercial real estate finance company NewPoint Holdings JV LLC, boosting the REIT's multifamily loan offerings.
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March 14, 2025
King & Spalding Real Estate Ace Jumps To Benesch In NY
Benesch Friedlander Coplan & Aronoff LLP has added commercial real estate attorney David Hudson from King & Spalding LLP as part of efforts to expand the firm's New York bench.
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March 14, 2025
Washington Dept. OKs Property Conversion Tax Break Regs
Washington state's Department of Revenue adopted regulations to clarify eligibility requirements for a retail sales and use tax break for the conversion of commercial property to affordable housing authorized by a 2024 law, according to a rulemaking order.
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March 13, 2025
Tampa Bay Rays Halt Plans For New $1.3B MLB Stadium
Major League Baseball's Tampa Bay Rays announced Thursday that it will stop developing a $1.3 billion stadium that's connected to a larger $6.5 billion redevelopment plan for the Historic Gas Plant District in St. Petersburg, Florida.
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March 13, 2025
Ore. Tribes Challenge Utility's Eminent Domain Bid
An Oregon Indigenous community is fighting a bid by Portland General Electric Co. to condemn five acres of public land for the maintenance and operation of its hydroelectric project, arguing that the move is a pretext to eliminate its ceremonial fishing platform at the state's largest waterfalls.
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March 13, 2025
Founder Wants $14.7M In Logistics Developer SPAC Dispute
The founder of a Latin America-based logistics property developer told a Florida federal court that he is owed at least $14.7 million as part of a 2024 special purpose acquisition company merger.
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March 13, 2025
Smith Currie Hires Veteran Construction Atty To Fla. Office
Smith Currie Oles LLP has hired a former Siegfried Rivera construction litigation attorney as partner in the firm's Fort Lauderdale, Florida, office, the firm announced Wednesday.
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March 13, 2025
Fla. City Will Pay $21M To End Co.'s Road Construction Suit
The mayor of Doral, Florida, and its city council have approved a $21 million settlement with a property owner, an entity that sought more than $30 million in damages alleging the city trespassed on its property and damaged it with a destructive road construction project.
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March 13, 2025
Builder Says Conn. Hilton Owner Owes $6M For $63M Project
A building contractor is taking the owner of a new Home2 Suites by Hilton hotel in Bristol, Connecticut, to court, claiming that what started as a $13 million project ballooned into a $63.4 million series of redesigns and changes in scope for which the hotel owner still owes $6 million.
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March 12, 2025
NYC Beefs Up Inspections After Bronx Building Collapse
A New York City Department of Buildings enforcement official said Wednesday that the agency is proactively targeting known bad actors and companies associated with them following a November 2023 major structural collapse at a multifamily property in the Bronx.
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March 12, 2025
Real Estate Companies Scrub DEI From Public Filings
Many real estate companies that previously disclosed their efforts to further diversity, equity and inclusion have avoided any mention of the topic in their latest financial disclosures, as the political winds have shifted against such initiatives.
Expert Analysis
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Adjusting Deals To Reflect Shifts In The CRE Market
As the commercial real estate market strengthens and moves out from a challenging time, industry participants should consider any concessions made due to recent trends and update transaction documents accordingly before entering into new deals, says Alexander Davis at Mayer Brown.
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4 International Arbitration Trends To Monitor In 2024
Global growth slowed substantially in 2023, and may continue into 2024 due to geopolitical instability, which could fuel four key trends in international arbitration in the coming year, including investor-state and commercial arbitration, an increase in arbitration out of China, and more, say Gregory Litt and Sharmistha Chakrabarti at Skadden.
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How DOI Aims To Modernize Resource Damage Assessments
The U.S. Department of the Interior's recent proposal to redesign its Type A rule for conducting natural resource damage assessment and restoration activities could lead to a more streamlined, flexible assessment process that would benefit both natural resource trustees and potentially responsible parties, says Brian Ferrasci-O'Malley at Nossaman.
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Key Issues When Navigating A Tenant's Bankruptcy
In light of recent Chapter 11 filings by Rite Aid and WeWork — companies with thousands of commercial leases — practitioners should review issues that can arise when bankruptcy is used to exit a lease, including the consequences of lease rejection and the statutory cap on landlord damage claims for a rejected lease, say attorneys at Proskauer.
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The Year Ahead In Foreign Investment And National Security
In 2024, expect the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, already at the forefront of addressing national security threats, to increase monitoring and enforcement related to outbound investment, focus on supply chain resilience in nondefense sectors, and heighten oversight of agricultural transactions, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.
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Sale-Leasebacks May Provide A Safe Financing Alternative
Amid rising interest rates and unpredictable market conditions, sale-leasebacks can be a useful investment option for both buyers and sellers, though their potential drawbacks demand careful consideration, says Chanel Di Blasi at Crosbie Gliner.
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5 Recent Developments Family Offices Are Watching In 2024
Although family offices have long been exempt from many of the more onerous regulations and reporting requirements governing U.S. investment advisers and asset managers, recent amendments to federal rules will have an impact on how family offices invest and operate in 2024, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.
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A Challenging CRE Environment Holds Opportunities In 2024
As the commercial real estate market faces reduced occupancy levels and rising financing costs, the new landscape will be favorable to those who can leverage capital, strategic vision and expertise to meet challenges like taking on distressed properties and converting office space to residential use, say Nesa Amamoo and Vered Rabia at Skadden.
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What The 2023 Bank Failures Taught Us, And What's To Come
As 2023 draws to a close, it's apparent that the bank failures this past spring sparked a seismic shift in the regulatory and supervisory landscape for banking organizations, and the consequences are still continuing to be felt throughout the financial sector as we head into 2024, say attorneys at Morgan Lewis.
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A Difficult Year For CRE, But Future May Be Brighter
2023 was a challenging year for the commercial real estate industry, marked by significant uncertainty, but market pressure and signs of rising interest rates provide some reasons to be cautiously optimistic for the year ahead as pandemic headwinds and gridlock fade away, say attorneys at Ropes & Gray.
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3 Developments That Will Affect Hospitality Companies In 2024
As the hospitality industry continues its post-pandemic recovery, it faces both challenges and opportunities to thrive in 2024, including navigating new labor rules, developing branded residential living spaces and cautiously embracing artificial intelligence, says Lauren Stewart at Sheppard Mullin.
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What WeWork's Ch. 11 Filing Means For Landlords
WeWork’s recent Chapter 11 filing in New Jersey has the potential to be one of the most consequential cases in the real estate industry in many years, and presents a number of issues for landlords, including unexpired leases, assumption, assignment and more, say attorneys at Mayer Brown.
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The 4 Top Philadelphia Commerce Court Opinions Of 2023
Four 2023 rulings from the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas — including decisions on judicial privilege, stay requests, sheriff's sales and the appointment of a receiver — highlight the court's commitment to stringent standards and address evolving challenges in commercial litigation, say Jonathan Hugg and Sarah Boutros at Eckert Seamans.