Talk of "Tishman effect" on area around Stuy Town
January 01, 2007 12:00AM By Catherine CuranAnticipating gentrification in surrounding neighborhood, investors get in on early deals More
Anticipating gentrification in surrounding neighborhood, investors get in on early deals More
Corcoran's Julie Pham gave up filmmaking for personal starring role More
Want to know where the market is headed and what the next big trends are in real estate? Forget the crystal ball. The Real Deal talked to developers and brokers to get their take on 2007 -- and their answers may surprise you. More
New option for developers to manage risk through derivatives debuts this month More
The dispute over the creation of a publicly accessible listings portal continues to stir debate and conflict between the board of New York's largest real estate trade group and its smallest member firms. In November, the directors of the Real Estate Board of New York told members they'd have to pay for the creation of an Internet portal site that would make portions of members' 12,000 to 15,000 exclusive property listings open to the public. More
Drab older office buildings and retail spaces a cut below nearby Class A space make New York's Diamond District a rough gem in gleaming Midtown. That may change if a proposed 30-story tower gets built there, a building that would rival the world's preeminent diamond exchanges. More
From Stuy Town to Harkness Mansion sale, the heady year that was More
As affordable housing program winds down, new properties come on the market More
Home buyers and refinancers were expected to face higher fees for credit reports beginning January 1 -- a price boost that has mortgage, credit industry and consumer group leaders fuming. More
Call it death by a thousand recycled newspaper cuts. More
When a $563 million cash deal to buy part of Cushman & Wakefield closes at the end of January, the Manhattan-based commercial brokerage giant will be able to do what it couldn't do before -- grow. More
Developers spent the end of 2006 rushing to fill Manhattan's office construction void, as a half-dozen projects in Midtown and Midtown South took major steps toward completion and plans for a new office tower were announced in Harlem. Low vacancy rates and high rents are accelerating the pace of commercial development in the borough, where only a few large towers have been built in the past several years.
More
Developers spent the end of 2006 rushing to fill Manhattan's office construction void, as a half-dozen projects in Midtown and Midtown South took major steps toward completion and plans for a new office tower were announced in Harlem. Low vacancy rates and high rents are accelerating the pace of commercial development in the borough, where only a few large towers have been built in the past several years.
More
Founder of a 24-year-old residential brokerage firm More
Broker ranks decline; lenders forced to close More
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