brandonlin
June 21, 2021
Tech's biggest companies are ramping up competition for the real estate between your hand and your elbow.
News Archives | Page 302 of 1011 | CREtech
Tech's biggest companies are ramping up competition for the real estate between your hand and your elbow.
Many tech startups are choosing to keep employees working from home and are pivoting to planning several elaborate company retreats per year to allow employees to meet and bond, the Wall Street Journal
(Bloomberg) -- Frank McCourt, the billionaire real estate mogul and former owner of the Los Angeles Dodgers, is pouring $100 million into an attempt to rebuild the foundations of social media. The effort, which he has loftily named Project Liberty, centers on the construction of a publicly accessible database of people’s social connections, allowing users to move records of their relationships b...
New York City property owners are pouring money into myriad new technologies that manage the construction process, control building access, and lower energy consumption.
As the national economy recovers from the pandemic and begins to take off, New York City is lagging, with changing patterns of work and travel threatening the engines that have long powered its jobs and prosperity.
New York has suffered deeper job losses as a share of its work force than any other big American city. And while the c...
Virginia is launching what claims to be the US state’s first smart city testbed, in partnership with Stafford County, Virgina’s Centre for Innovative Technology (CIT) and technology provider Mutalink.
This public/private partnership is funded by the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Science and Technology Directorate (S&T) that aims to foster community-driven innovation that impr...
Austin Clements was ready to give up.
He’d quit his job in venture capital in 2019 to try to launch his own fund giving early-stage money to tech startups founded by entrepreneurs of color, but investor interest was slim. Last June, he and his co-founder figured that before throwing in the towel, they’d write one final mass email to anyone they’d ever pitched or spoken to about their fund...
On June 7, the high-profile AEC startup Katerra filed for bankruptcy, having spent more than $2 billion in just over six years. Its insolvency concludes the most well-funded attempt to redefine the architecture and construction industries through modular design, prefabrication, and supply-chain integration.
Unlike the rest of the country, Bay Area home buyers are seeing more options on the market compared with last year — but those houses are more expensive than ever and buyers are snapping them up within days, according to a new report.
Arrived Homes, the real estate crowdfunding investment platform, announced it has raised $10 million in equity and $27 million in debt financing for a total of $37 million.