News Archives | Page 401 of 1011 | CREtech

Lauren January 25, 2021
The Lake Mist apartment complex in Charlotte was in danger, and so were its residents. A cluster of two story brick-and-tan buildings near a busy commercial corridor, the 144-unit complex was one of a dwindling number of rental options available to residents making less than the area’s median income. It’s not a public housing development or an official affordable housing project, but ...
Lauren January 25, 2021
Latch Inc., a maker of smart locks and building-management software, plans to go public by merging with a special-purpose acquisition company backed by a real-estate giant, the latest startup looking to use a so-ca...
Lauren January 22, 2021
(Brooklyn, January 2021) - CANOA, the first scaling platform for sustainable design and constructio...
Lauren January 22, 2021
The Chera family’s Crown Acquisitions is raising $200 million for a special purpose acquisition company, or SPAC, that is focused on proptech, according to a regulatory filing.
Lauren January 22, 2021
CoStar Group Inc. and a private equity group led by Warburg Pincus are the final bidders competing for data provider CoreLogic Inc., according to people fami...
Lauren January 22, 2021
President Biden talks — and promises to govern — like a soothing centrist. But early moves show he's keeping his promise to advance a liberal agenda, Axios' Dion Rabouin, Courtenay Brown and Jennifer A. Kingson 
Lauren January 22, 2021
California faces the convergent crises of the lack of affordable housing and worsening natural disasters like 
Lauren January 22, 2021
Home-financing startup Knockaway Inc. hired its first finance chief to set its house in order as it looks to expand into dozens of markets amid strong demand for housing in the U.S. Michelle DeBella started as chief financial officer of New York-based Knockaway, which does business as Knock, on Dec. 28.
Lauren January 22, 2021

With nonessential offices closed since December, most office occupiers are once again facing uncertainty about their office space, waiting until California and LA County regulations allow for a broader return to the office and until pandemic conditions improve so workers and employers feel better about returning to a physical office.

Lauren January 22, 2021

COVID-19 has spared no generation, but has put a unique burden on Gen-Zers—the roughly 67 million Americans born between 1997 and 2012—who are just entering the workforce, starting college, or graduating high school amid an international pandemic. Despite the coronavirus grinding everyday life as we know it to a halt,...