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ATLANTA-Legendary singer Tony Bennett will be the featured performer at the May 3 dinner and live auction at the Hyatt Regency Hotel sponsored by the 300-member Commercial Real Estate Women of Atlanta. CREW has raised $850,000 to date for the Atlanta Women's Fund that aids homeless and battered women and children.
PHOENIX-One of the largest stock brokerage firms in the nation has leased a floor in a $50-million Class A office tower that's under development by Opus West at the tony corner of 24th Street and Camelback Road in Phoenix.
CHICAGO-The Blake-Lamb Funeral Home building at 1035 N. Dearborn St. is sold to JDL Development, which plans to build 23 condominiums on the Near North site.
DENVER-The Lockheed Martin Deer Creek headquarters, being marketed for $60 million, has not made Boeing's cut of sites in the feverish competition among Denver, Dallas and Chicago. It's too big, says one of the listing brokers.
DALLAS-Thirty-six real estate brokers have received a leading accreditation. One Dallas-Ft. Worth designee stands out because he comes from a three-broker operation, unlike the others who hail from a powerbroker list representative of nationwide firms.
PORTLAND-Most brokers say the moves began in earnest in early 1998 after Trammell Crow Co. decided to add brokerage to its core business of developing real estate for institutional investors by taking top performers from the existing local brokerages.
HOUSTON-Hines and Prime Asset Management will break ground in July on a 689,000-office building. It is the only Houston project in which Hines holds an equity interest. Calpine has spoken for 300,000 sf, ample space for merging its three Houston offices.
ORLANDO-Some professionals prefer to stay with simple, straightforward, local one-off transactions, while others seek a more challenging environment working with global clients who use the Internet to create and cement deals, Woody Coley, managing director, global services, Trammell Crow Co., tells GlobeSt.com.
ORLANDO-Some professionals prefer to stay with simple, straightforward, local one-off transactions, while others seek a more challenging environment working with global clients who use the Internet to create and cement deals, Woody Coley, managing director, global services, Trammell Crow Co., tells GlobeSt.com.