Commercial

  • January 29, 2025

    Senate Banking Committee Forms NFIP Working Group

    With the National Flood Insurance Program's authorization set to expire in March, the U.S. Senate Committee on Banking has formed a working group to reform the program and work toward long-term reauthorization, a press release from committee chairman and South Carolina Republican Sen. Tim Scott said.

  • January 29, 2025

    Momentary Funding Freeze Gives Brownfields Pause

    President Donald Trump's turbulent 48-hour federal funding freeze sent ripples through the brownfields industry, with developers — who often rely on the federal government as a major funding partner — unsure of the future feasibility of their projects.

  • January 29, 2025

    NYC Seeks Bids For 'Ambitious' Manhattan Redevelopment

    New York City is seeking bids to redevelop the 66,000-square-foot Gansevoort Square area in Manhattan, and bidders have until April 30 to make their pitches, the mayor's office announced Wednesday.

  • January 29, 2025

    Polsinelli Guides $135M Loan Deal For Ex-Pfizer NYC HQ

    Northwind Group, guided by Polsinelli PC, loaned $135 million for a 33-story midtown Manhattan office tower that used to be part of Pfizer's New York City headquarters and will be converted into a residential property, the real estate private equity firm announced Wednesday.

  • January 29, 2025

    Cooper Union Prevails In Dispute Over Chrysler Building

    Cooper Union's response to pro-Palestinian protests on campus does not amount to a breach of contract with the ground leaseholder of the Chrysler Building, which is owned by the university, despite allegations that the college's actions led subtenants to bail, a New York state court judge found Wednesday.

  • January 29, 2025

    Historic Texas Hotel Nets $79M Construction Loan

    The developer of El Tropicano Hotel has closed a $79 million construction loan as it works on overhauling the historic San Antonio, Texas, landmark.

  • January 29, 2025

    Real Estate Group Of The Year: DLA Piper

    The real estate team at DLA Piper over the past year has shepherded deals on matters ranging from massive, billion-dollar data centers to inner city mixed-use projects and what's been widely reported as the largest private real estate development in the United States, securing a place among the 2024 Law360 Real Estate Groups of the Year.

  • January 29, 2025

    Construction Group Of The Year: Nossaman

    Nossaman LLP's work on major projects like the $4.9 billion automated people mover system in Los Angeles International Airport and the $600 million modernization of Interstate 75 in Michigan scored the firm a spot among the 2024 Law360 Construction Groups of the Year.

  • January 29, 2025

    Katten Real Estate Leaders Suggest Prenegotiated Bankruptcy

    Bankruptcy protection is usually a last resort for commercial real estate borrowers. But for a large distressed asset in a high-tax district, a prepackaged bankruptcy is a no-brainer, according to Katten partners Scott M. Vetri and Timothy G. Little. Here's how it would work.

  • January 29, 2025

    Swift Policy Shifts Make Adaptability Crucial In Real Estate

    Few professionals understand the relentless pace of change quite like real estate attorneys do, and navigating the shifting sands of policy is becoming an all too familiar challenge where the only constant seems to be the need for constant adaptation.

  • January 28, 2025

    End To Third-Party Standing May Affect Ga. Civil Rights Suits

    The Supreme Court of Georgia on Tuesday shut down a landowner's bid to sue her county on behalf of the would-be buyer of her property, declaring that Peach State courts will no longer recognize third-party standing as a means for plaintiffs to get in the courthouse's doors in a ruling experts say could have a wide effect on future civil rights cases.

  • January 28, 2025

    Judge OKs Refiling Of Suit Over $20M Austin Nightclub Deal

    A Texas federal judge granted a bid to dismiss a suit claiming a title company handed over $3 million to a fraudster, saying Tuesday that she would allow the plaintiff to rework its complaint to show the defendants were indeed more heavily tied to the sham than the current complaint contended.

  • January 28, 2025

    Life Sciences REIT Exec Sees Market Boon In Trump Admin

    Alexandria Real Estate Equities Inc.'s founder and executive chairman applauded the Trump administration in a Tuesday earnings call, saying several expected reforms will indirectly aid key life science real estate markets.

  • January 28, 2025

    Dubai Co. Begins Condo Project At Surfside Collapse Site

    Dubai-based developer DAMAC International said Tuesday it plans to build its first U.S. real estate project in the town of Surfside, Florida, at the site where the 12-story Champlain Towers South condominium collapsed in June 2021, resulting in the deaths of 98 people.

  • January 28, 2025

    Citadel Taps Related For Miami Tower, While Another Is Cut

    In a pairing of heavyweights in their fields, Citadel LLC has announced that it is partnering with developer Related Companies to build the hedge fund's planned waterfront supertall tower in Miami's Brickell Financial District. But the news was accompanied by word that another prominent tower project in the neighborhood will not be moving forward.

  • January 28, 2025

    BCLP Adds Ex-Brownstein Hyatt Real Estate Atty In Denver

    Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner LLP hired a former Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck LLP real estate attorney as a partner for its commercial real estate team in its Denver office, the firm announced Monday.

  • January 28, 2025

    Ohio Board Nixes Bid To Cut Regal Theater's Value

    The Ohio Board of Tax Appeals rejected arguments that a Regal Cinemas property's value should be cut to $4 million from $11.6 million, saying the property owner didn't show that a county appraiser's valuation based on leases and rents of similar properties across seven states was flawed.

  • January 28, 2025

    Industrial Developer Invests $120M Into NC Distribution Center

    PNK Group invested $120 million into a High Point, North Carolina, distribution center that it built on behalf of water hygiene and conservation company Ecolab Corp., the industrial property developer announced Tuesday.

  • January 28, 2025

    Guns Owners Urge Justices To Throw Out NY Carry Law

    Members of the Gun Owners of America Inc. have petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn a New York carry law that the Second Circuit largely upheld last year, arguing that the lower appellate court's ruling "doubled down" on erroneous conclusions already vacated the last time the justices heard the case.

  • January 28, 2025

    Greenberg Traurig Digital Infrastructure Leader Joins Kirkland

    Kirkland & Ellis LLP has picked up the longtime co-chair of Greenberg Traurig LLP's digital infrastructure, data center and cloud computing industry group, who has joined the firm's corporate practice group in Washington, D.C.

  • January 28, 2025

    Wynn Fraud Trial Still On As Appeals Court Declines To Step In

    A Wynn Resorts subsidiary cannot challenge a decision allowing a trial on accusations that it misled the former owner of the site of its Encore Boston Harbor casino into cutting the property's sale price by $40 million, the state's intermediate-level appeals court has ruled.

  • January 28, 2025

    NY Assembly Bills Seek Tax On Vacant Land, Buildings In NYC

    New York City would be permitted to impose taxes on certain vacant land and vacant residential properties under a pair of bills introduced in the New York state Assembly.

  • January 28, 2025

    Slaughter & May-Led JV To Buy 6 Warehouses Worth €470M

    Property investor Segro PLC said Tuesday that its joint venture with a pension fund has agreed to acquire six logistics centers in the Netherlands and Germany worth €470 million ($490 million), as the U.K. company plans to expand its presence in Europe.

  • January 27, 2025

    Feds May Trim $2B In Leases Over Trump's Term, Trepp Says

    Following President Donald Trump's order on Inauguration Day that federal workers return to the office, a Trepp report finds more than a third of all office space leased by the federal government could potentially be terminated during Trump's second term.

  • January 27, 2025

    Amazon To Open Office In Miami's Wynwood District

    Amazon has chosen Miami's Wynwood neighborhood for a new location in the Magic City, agreeing to lease 50,333 square feet at the soon-to-be-completed Wynwood Plaza mixed-use project, the owners said Monday.

Expert Analysis

  • SVB Collapse Underscores Policy And Regulatory Pitfalls

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    The recent failures of three American banks reveal hidden vulnerabilities, raise concerns about moral hazard, and highlight the need for tighter regulation and closer monitoring of unrealized investment-portfolio losses in the U.S. banking system, says attorney Patrick Meson.

  • NY Bankruptcy Court Pivots On Commercial Rent Damage Cap

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    A New York bankruptcy court departed from its prior precedent in the recent Cortlandt Liquidating case, effectively lowering the commercial rent damages cap, and making the court a little less friendly for landlords but potentially an attractive venue for debtors planning to reject significant commercial leases, say attorneys at MoFo.

  • Bankruptcy Sales Uncertain After Justices' Section 363 Ruling

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    The U.S. Supreme Court's holding in MOAC v. Transform that Section 363(m) of the Bankruptcy Code is not a jurisdictional provision means parties to 363 sales are now at the mercy of courts that may have differing perspectives on the issue, creating uncertainty for trustees, third parties and purchasers, say Thomas Loeb and Carrie Brosius at Vorys.

  • Commercial Real Estate Lending Checkup Amid Market Unrest

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    Given the sustained volatility of current lending markets, now may be a good time for financing institutions to dust off their commercial real estate agreements and update them if necessary, say Emil Petrossian and Alexander Miller at Glaser Weil.

  • La. Suit Could Set New Enviro Justice Litigation Paradigm

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    Inclusive Louisiana v. St. James Parish, a lawsuit filed recently in Louisiana federal court that makes wide-ranging and novel constitutional and statutory claims of environmental racism based on centuries of local history, could become a new template for environmental justice litigation against governments and businesses, say attorneys at King & Spalding.

  • Policyholder Lessons From Sandy No-Coverage Decision

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    A New York federal court recently decided that in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy, Madelaine Chocolate knew Great Northern Insurance’s all-risk policy offered no coverage for storm surge — an important reminder that policyholders should review policy language for ambiguities or anti-concurrent causation clauses, say Dennis Artese and Joshua Zelen at Anderson Kill.

  • 5th Circ. Offers Expert Opinion Guidance For Insurance Cases

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    A recent Fifth Circuit decision in Majestic Oil v. Lloyd's of London provides insight into how Texas' concurrent causation doctrine could affect insurance cases where the cause of damage is at issue, and raises considerations for litigants faced with new or revised expert reports after the deadline has passed, say Brian Scarbrough and Cianan Lesley at Jenner & Block.

  • FTC Proposal Greatly Widens Auto-Renewal Regulation

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    The Federal Trade Commission's proposed rule on automatic renewal subscriptions would impose significant new obligations on sellers of negative option plans and expand the agency's enforcement powers, likely requiring companies to examine and change their practices, say attorneys at Squire Patton.

  • Now Is The Time For Independent Industry Self-Regulation

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    The high level of trust in business, coupled with the current political and legal landscape, provides an opportunity for companies to play a meaningful role in finding solutions to public policy issues through the exploration of independent industry self-regulation models, says Eric Reicin at BBB National Programs.

  • 20 Years On, Campbell Holds Lessons On Reining In Ratios

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    Twenty years ago, the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in State Farm v. Campbell provided critical guidance on the constitutionally permissible ratio of punitive to compensatory damages — and both Campbell and subsequent federal circuit court decisions informed by it offer important pointers for defendants, say attorneys at Dechert.

  • How Bank Turmoil Is Affecting Real Estate Purchases, Sales

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    The new uncertainty in the availability of financing from bank lenders that were previously considered "money good," spurred by the bank crisis, has inserted a wrinkle in the commercial real estate market that alters some of the dynamics between a buyer and seller, says Simran Bindra at Thompson Coburn.

  • How CMS Proposal Would Change PE Deal Transparency

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    The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services recently proposed a new rule that would require the disclosure of additional ownership regarding Medicare and Medicaid nursing facilities, an approach that many states have started to take and reflects the Biden administration's scrutiny on private equity deals, say attorneys at Kirkland.

  • How Cannabis Cos. Can Comply With NJ Industrial Site Law

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    As New Jersey’s recreational cannabis market flourishes, manufacturers that may be subject to a state environmental law must take extra precautions to mitigate potential liabilities and costs, including for historical contamination, says Matthew Karmel at Offit Kurman.