News: Construction Design & Engineering

Nelson of Massey Knakal speaks at IREM luncheon on September 25th

James Nelson, partner at Massey Knakal Realty Services was the keynote speaker at the September 25th luncheon of the Greater New York Chapter of the Institute of Real Estate Management (IREM). The topic was "The State of the New York City Real Estate Market." Nelson said, "The recovery in the property sales market continues to out pace the recovery in the broader economy and is, in fact, performing better than the recovery in commercial real estate's underlying fundamentals would dictate." The chapter's next event is "Ethics for the Real Estate Manager" (ETH800) on October 22nd from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. It will be held at RY Management Co. Inc., 1619 Second Ave. (90th St. between 2nd & 3rd Aves.) Tuition is for $185 members and $230 for non-members. This course is approved in New York State for five continuing education credit hours. Visit www.iremnyc,org for more information.
MORE FROM Construction Design & Engineering

New compliance data shows impact of Local Law 97 to improve sustainability in NYC

Manhattan, NY According to buildings commissioner Ahmed Tigani and Housing commissioner Dina Levy, 93% of the covered privately owned properties, representing 91% of covered buildings, across the city have filed their Local Law 97 compliance reports, demonstrating significant participation from the city’s real estate community
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Columns and Thought Leadership
Premium experiences, proven returns: The New revenue playbook for sports venues - by Terry McIntyre

Premium experiences, proven returns: The New revenue playbook for sports venues - by Terry McIntyre

Investing in the Fan Experience as a Revenue Strategy The sports and entertainment venues that bet on premium experiences years ago are now seeing those investments pay off in packed seats, increased revenue, and industry recognition.
We support green construction. Just not this kind - by Tammy Smith

We support green construction. Just not this kind - by Tammy Smith

Most people think of St. Patrick’s Day as a fun footnote on the calendar. In construction logistics, however, it’s a full-scale operational variable — especially if your work touches major metro areas with major parades and, let’s call it what it is, enthusiastic celebrants.