Lauren, Author at CREtech | Page 135 of 282
The recent events around
Most of the world is yet to experience the benefits of a 5G network, but the geopolitical race for the next big thing in telecommunications technology is already heating up.
The deal, announced by Bold at a town hall meeting Tuesday, will boost the venture-backed firm’s new development marketing division. Bold CEO Jordan Sachs could not immediately be reached for comment.
Mark Dixon has seen a lot of upheaval in the 30 years since he started his flexible office business: the dot-com b...
RXR Acquisition, a blank check company formed by RXR Realty targeting real estate technology, filed on Friday with the SEC to raise up to $250 million in an initial public offering.
CoStar Group is making an offer for CoreLogic of $96.76 per share of CoStar’s stock, or roughly $6.9 billion. This follows Stone Point Capital and Insight Partners’ bid earlier this month of $6 billion for the global property informatio...
One of the hardest questions for American corporations to answer: When should offices reopen? From Silicon Valley to Tennessee to Pennsylvania, high hopes that a rapid vaccine rollout in early 2021 would send millions of workers back into offices by spring have been scuttled. Many companies are pushing workplace return dates to September—and beyond—or refusing to commit to specific dates, tell...
The office industry as a whole has been impacted by the widespread adoption of remote work, but the sharpest losses have been felt by coworking companies that signed long-term leases at urban core office buildings,
RXR Acquisition, a blank check company formed by RXR Realty targeting real estate technology, filed on Friday with the SEC to raise up to $250 million in an initial public offering. The Uniondale, NY-based company plans to raise $250 million by offering 25 million units at $10. Each unit consists of one share of common stock and one-fifth of a warrant, exercisable at $11.50. At the proposed deal s...
The shiny, onyx-colored building appears alien in its drab, postindustrial Philadelphia neighborhood—the love child of a “D-volt battery and the Death Star,” as one local architecture critic put it, admiringly.