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An institutional real estate investor sells Gateway at Torrey Hills, a two-building, 198,000-square-foot office campus in the Del Mar Heights submarket, for $105 million.
Tightening spreads and yields on new investments, as well as e-commerce's effects on traditional retail are some of the challenges these lenders are facing today, PGIM's Paige Hood tells GlobeSt.com in advance of MBA's CREF conference.
Due to damage caused by wildfires and mudslides, property-insurance rates are likely to go up this year. GlobeSt.com speaks with two experts on how to approach your policy and what to avoid.
JLL reports that 2018 is poised to be another banner year for San Diego, with 650,000 square feet of tenants scheduled to take occupancy, 440,000 square feet of build-to-suits to deliver and 3.7 million square feet of tenants touring the market.
This sector has been reinventing itself for millennia, and it will continue to do so, meaning now may be the time to buy more retail properties, CBRE's Spencer Levy tells attendees at Wednesday's CREW San Diego event.
More-efficient and streamlined services as well as the explosive use of mobile devices for everything from search to completing transactions have taken hold of the residential financing sector, Purplebricks' Eric Eckardt tells GlobeSt.com.
2018 is poised to be a strong leasing year based on current tenant demand, limited new construction and steadily increasing rental rates, JLL's Tim Olson tells GlobeSt.com. We speak with him about the submarkets where space is in greatest demand.
A recent California Supreme Court affirmation upholding SB800 as a “virtually exclusive remedy” in certain construction-defect cases gives a clear pathway to developers, whether they follow the legislation or not, Allen Matkins' Tim Hutter tells GlobeSt.com.
With more seasoned employees in the workplace than ever before and the ocean industry at our doorstep, San Diego must chart a new course and grab onto these opportunities, say speakers at Thursday's economic roundtable.
The market must increase density, reduce development costs and foster community in order to help meet the demand for affordable residential builds, says the City's Kris Michell at Thursday's Economic Roundtable.