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Pittsburgh Strip District Apartment Push Opens

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Which Strip District Apartment Projects Are Active? Accelerating despite a tougher financing climate, the Strip District apartment pipeline remains active across Penn Avenue, Liberty Avenue, Smallman Street, and nearby riverfront sites. On Penn and Liberty, a reviewed proposal includes two six-story buildings totaling about 235 residences, plus retail, protected bike parking, and structured parking. The Penn building is planned at 111 units, while the Liberty building contains 123. The listing remains active in zoning and planning review. On Smallman Street, Penrose Advisors and Hudson Companies have broken ground on developments spanning the 29th and 30th blocks, adding 318 rentals and reinforcing continued expansion. Riverfront and mixed-use projects marketed as active include 50-26 Street, Waterman, Mercer, and Pimlico Row. Pittsburgh's broader redevelopment debate has also highlighted affordable housing mandates requiring 10% of units in some projects to be set aside for low-i...

Phoenix Biltmore Offices Fill With 2 New Tenants

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Biltmore Fashion Park Offices Reach Full Occupancy A full-occupancy milestone has been reached at the office building at Biltmore Fashion Park in Phoenix. RED Development finalized leases with VanTrust and Phoenix Design One, also known as PDO. The two signings filled the more than 30,000-square-foot building, according to reports from AZ Big Media and KTAR. RED Development was identified as the leasing and development entity behind the completed transactions. The office building operates within Biltmore Fashion Park, a mixed-use setting that combines office space with a prominent retail environment in Phoenix. Its position inside the broader fashion park adds context to the tenant mix and the project’s role within the property. The space was created through a retail conversion led by RED Development after it acquired the property. Similar mixed-use strategies are also central to the open-air redevelopment vision being discussed for Berkshire Mall in Wyomissing. The completed leases ...

Ogden 14-Acre Development Site Sells to Idaho Group

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Ogden’s Former Fred Meyer Site Sold In Ogden, the former Fred Meyer site has been sold to an Idaho-based development group, transferring control of a 14-acre parcel long regarded as one of the city’s most significant redevelopment opportunities. The sale marks a new phase for a long-vacant commercial property that has drawn sustained public attention. It also renews focus on how zoning changes could shape future plans and broader community impact. Site History and Redevelopment Context The former store closed years ago, and the old building was later demolished, clearing the site for new concepts. Demolition of the roughly 150,000-square-foot structure was completed in October 2016 after the site had sat vacant for years amid growing blight concerns . That sequence left the parcel as a prominent underused property in Ogden’s commercial corridor. Similar redevelopment efforts elsewhere have highlighted the appeal of an open-air retail hub model designed to improve visibility and pedest...

New Jersey Watcher Suburb Turns Red-Hot Again

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What Happened at 657 Boulevard? Shortly after the June 2014 purchase, 657 Boulevard in Westfield, New Jersey, shifted from an upscale 1905 Dutch Colonial Revival home into the center of a deeply unsettling mystery. The six-bedroom house had been bought by Derek and Maria Broaddus for about $1.36 million on an affluent street. Before moving in, they received an anonymous letter from someone claiming decades of anonymous surveillance and knowledge of prior generations tied to the property. The first note was addressed to “The New Owner” and signed by someone calling themself The Watcher . More letters followed. They described parts of the home’s layout and mentioned the family’s children in alarming terms. Police were contacted, and investigators, private detectives, and former FBI personnel were reportedly brought in. In another major property-rights case, Florida authorities recently won a ruling lifting more than 9,303 statewide liens tied to deceptive real estate agreements. DNA and...

Charlotte Wake Forest Building Redevelopment Starts

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Wake Forest Charlotte Tower Becomes Apartments Conversion planning has begun for the former Wake Forest University Charlotte Center at 200 N. College St. in uptown Charlotte. The office-to-apartment effort is in its earliest phase, with a land development construction plan permit filed by RP 200 N Owner LLC. Vacancy Pressure Drives Reuse The tower has been largely vacant since Bank of America left in February 2023, underscoring continued weakness in Charlotte’s office market. Belgravia Management LP, tied to the current ownership, appears to be pursuing adaptive reuse through interior renovations rather than teardown. That approach aligns with historic preservation goals. It also reflects growing interest in mixed-use developments as cities respond to office market volatility. Uptown Shift Intensifies Plans call for about 290 apartments within the existing building. No exterior demolition or site grading appears in the permit scope, and the property’s uptown location offers strong tra...

Rockford $2.6M Office-to-Apartment Flip Advances

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What the Rockford Apartment Conversion Is In downtown Rockford, a $2.6 million office-to-apartment conversion is moving forward at 614 First St. It is an adaptive reuse project that transforms an existing commercial building into housing. Rather than introducing ground-up construction, the development repurposes what is already there. It is a smaller-scale urban infill effort focused on adding housing within an established downtown setting. The project reflects broader reinvestment trends in Rockford. Older properties are being reused to support mixed-use activity and a stronger residential presence near offices, services, and the riverfront. Nearby, the city’s larger Colman Yards redevelopment underscores the same push toward downtown housing and mixed-use revitalization. Located off Bridge Street, the site sits in an area showing visible redevelopment momentum. Its proximity to major downtown destinations gives the conversion added urban significance. As an apartment conversion, the...

Raleigh Triangle Price Split Shows Double-Digit Drop

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Why Raleigh’s Housing Market Feels Split As mortgage rates remain elevated, Raleigh’s housing market is increasingly dividing along affordability lines. Higher borrowing costs have reduced purchasing power and forced many buyers to narrow their search. Homes that meet the most important needs still draw attention, especially among rate-qualified shoppers in the mid-$500,000 range and above. Meanwhile, the under-$500,000 segment has a thinner buyer pool, widening the affordability gap. Location preferences are also shaping this divide. Cary, Apex, Raleigh, and Wake Forest continue to attract stronger interest because of access to RTP, major employers, schools, and daily conveniences. This lifestyle divergence helps core and downtown-adjacent areas hold demand more effectively than outer suburbs. More listings and new construction in some suburban pockets have increased choice, negotiation, and longer marketing times. Markets with rising inventory levels often give buyers more leverage ...