Hartz Moutain honors FirstService Williams with Broker of the Year
FirstService Williams has been recognized by developer Hartz Mountain Industries with 2009 Brokers of the Year awards. Hartz Mountain is one of the most prominent developers in the U.S., with 38 million s/f of assets in the New Jersey/New York area alone.
As Office Award recipients, the FirstService Williams team of Michael Cohen and Colton Brown, along with David Pennetta of Oxford & Simpson Realty, Inc., negotiated a seven-year, 320,282 s/f renewal on behalf of Broadridge Financial Solutions, Inc. at 2 Journal Sq. in Jersey City.
As Industrial Award recipients, the FirstService Williams team of Lori Zuck and Marvin Rosenberg represented Breeze-Eastern Corp. in its 10-year, 116,246 s/f office and industrial lease at 35 Melanie Ln. in Whippany, N.J. Hartz Mountain Industries owns and manages the new facility at 35 Melanie Ln.
Manhattan, NY AmTrustRE has completed the $211 million acquisition of 260 Madison Ave., a 22-story, 570,000 s/f office building. AmTrustRE was self-represented in the purchase. Darcy Stacom and William Herring
Last month Bisnow scheduled the New York AI & Technology cocktail event on commercial real estate, moderated by Tal Kerret, president, Silverstein Properties, and including tech officers from Rudin Management, Silverstein Properties, structural engineering company Thornton Tomasetti and the founder of Overlay Capital Build,
Let’s be real: if you’re still only posting photos of properties, you’re missing out. Reels, Stories, and Shorts are where attention lives, and in commercial real estate, attention is currency.
Many investors are in a period of strategic pause as New York City’s mayoral race approaches. A major inflection point came with the Democratic primary victory of Zohran Mamdani, a staunch tenant advocate, with a progressive housing platform which supports rent freezes for rent
The state has the authority to seize all or part of privately owned commercial real estate for public use by the power of eminent domain. Although the state is constitutionally required to provide just compensation to the property owner, it frequently fails to account