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Naperville Office Sale Crashes 50% From 2015 Peak

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Naperville Office Sale: Buyer, Price, Building Trading at a steep discount, the MetroWest office tower at 55 Shuman Blvd. in Naperville emerged as a stark example of value erosion in the suburban office market. Newmark was hired by Equus Capital Partners, which has owned the property since 2015, to seek a buyer. Distressed office trades are increasingly seen as a form of market correction as investors reprice aging assets amid broader uncertainty. That buyer profile was less clear than in other recent Naperville transactions. In those deals, MS Holdings acquired three DynaCom properties, while MCB Science + Health bought the iMed medical office asset. The MS Holdings portfolio closed on Jan. 20, 2021, for $13.75 million, or $133 per square foot, in Naperville office sale . MetroWest was marketed at about $18 million for 207,714 square feet. Its price dynamics stood apart from stronger comparables, including iMed at $28 million, or $386 per square foot. Another comparison was the MS Ho...

Denver RiNo Apartment Pivot Breaks Ground

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What Is the Blake Street RiNo Project? The Blake Street RiNo project is a 16-story, 275,608-square-foot mixed-use development in Denver’s River North district. It will add 310 Class-A apartment units directly across from the 38th and Blake A-Line station. It is being developed by Formativ, with The Weitz Company serving as constructor. Davis Partnership Architects is leading both architecture and interior design. The project celebrated its topping out on March 6, 2026, marking completion of the structural concrete phase. The project brings together residential and commercial uses in one transit-oriented property. Its housing mix includes studios, one-bedroom, and two-bedroom apartments designed for attainable urban living. The timing also aligns with a Denver market shaped by rising inventory , giving residents and investors more housing options citywide. The development is positioned to expand housing supply for downtown Denver residents seeking walkable, rail-connected access. Its p...

Jacksonville Broker Hit With PPP Fraud in Ponzi Case

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What Happened in the Cedric Griffin Case? After a nearly two-year search, Jacksonville real estate broker Cedric Griffin surrendered to the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office. He was taken into custody without bond while awaiting trial. The case timeline shows authorities had pursued Griffin as separate civil and criminal matters developed. He now faces multiple counts of organized fraud and grand theft. Investigators say the alleged scheme defrauded investors of nearly $5.9 million . Cases like this echo broader warnings from other fraud prosecutions that proof over promises should guide every investment decision. A court date is set for February 10. Federal Allegations In a related federal action, the SEC sued Griffin on May 4, 2023, in the Middle District of Florida. The complaint alleges violations of Securities Act Section 17(a) and Exchange Act Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5. The legal implications are significant. Prosecutors and regulators say the case involves about $5.9 million fro...

9 Legal Consequences of Improper Tenant Screening

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Improper tenant screening can hit you nine ways. No written consent. Stale or noncompliant reports. False-positive identity matches. Missing an Adverse Action Notice. Missing required credit-score disclosures. Fair Housing disparate-impact claims from blanket criminal or eviction rules. State or local disclosure and fee violations. Weak data security and breach exposure. Negligent-screening liability after an on-site incident. Each mistake can mean real statutory damages, attorneys’ fees, higher insurance, vacancy loss, and reputational drag. Keep going to see how to bulletproof your process today. Tenant Screening Laws: What Landlords Must Follow A compliant tenant-screening process starts with one non-negotiable step: you must get the applicant’s written or electronic authorization before you pull any credit or background report. You also must ensure your screening criteria comply with the Fair Housing Act and avoid decisions based on protected classes. New legislation mandates equi...

Minneapolis Dayton Project Faces Foreclosure Threat

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Why Did the Dayton Project Default? Confronting mounting pressure, the Dayton Project fell into technical default after 601W Cos. failed to satisfy leasing thresholds required by its loan documents. The core problem was occupancy. Despite acquiring and redeveloping the downtown Minneapolis property more than four years earlier, 601W had leased only about 10 percent of the massive complex. Similar pressures have appeared in other downtown markets as remote work trends continue reshaping office demand and leasing expectations. Those leasing failures left the project below lender-required thresholds, even though loan payments remained current. The shortfall was magnified by preservation costs and a difficult market. The 1.2 million-square-foot historic renovation required extensive structural work, including removal of 53 outdated escalators and reinforcement tied to additions built between 1910 and 1963. The building’s long history as the Dayton Project added symbolic weight to the red...

Portland Ritz Condos Cut 50%, Luxury Shock

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Why Portland Ritz Condos Were Cut 50 Slashed prices at the Portland Ritz-Carlton Residences reflected a project under severe financial strain, weak buyer absorption, and a failed original luxury pricing strategy. Court filings and lender disclosure issues showed the capital structure was unstable long before foreclosure. A $460 million loan funded Block 216, and Ready Capital later added $47 million despite the project being underwater. The complaint says shareholders were not told about risky loans tied to Block 216 before Ready Capital’s merger with Broadmark. The loan then became out-of-balance before Ready Capital's merger efforts, highlighting deep financial deterioration. Similar distress has surfaced in other luxury developments, including the November 12 auction tied to the Ritz-Carlton Paradise Valley foreclosure fight. Sales Breakdown Sales performance also exposed a clear market mismatch. Only 11 of 132 residences sold, an 8 percent sell-through rate, over an extended ...

New York Second-Home Tax Plan Jolts Luxury Market

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What Is the New York Second-Home Tax? At the center of New York's latest fiscal debate is a proposed annual surcharge on New York City second homes valued at $5 million or more. Governor Kathy Hochul presented it as a recurring levy aimed at luxury residences held by nonresident owners. The measure is intended to help narrow New York City's budget gap and support essential services. Supporters describe the plan as a fairness measure. It would apply only to properties that are not used as a primary residence or occupied by the owner’s family, targeting non-primary luxury units . They argue wealthy owners benefit from city safety, stability, and infrastructure even when their apartments sit vacant. Manhattan's luxury segment has recently shown renewed strength, highlighted by an 85% surge in sales volume for homes priced above $10 million. Officials project at least $500 million a year in recurring revenue. Critics say the tax could be complicated to administer. They point t...