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The Covid-19 pandemic immediately changed how people work.
Powered by startups, freelancers, and established companies looking for extra desks, coworking office managers enjoyed several years of uninterrupted growth in Manhattan.
After many unsuccessful attempts to sell the office building at 51 West 52nd Street in Midtown Manhattan, the time has finally come for the landmark to change hands – for the first time ever.
New York City’s Pennsylvania Station, most commonly known as Penn Station, is the busiest transportation hub in the entire Western Hemisphere.
In the commercial real estate world of New York City, one pivotal question stands: coworking vs.
New York City is one of the fastest-growing urban centers in the world.
Ed Koch, the former NYC mayor, referred to New York City as the “capital of the world” in his memoir “Mayor.” It’s no wonder that the city is a powerhouse of commercial real estate, a stage where the biggest commercial real estate landlords in NYC compete.
Picture yourself walking through the energetic streets of New York City, eyeing that perfect commercial space for your business.
When looking for the perfect workplace in New York City, businesses often face a critical question: is buying versus leasing office space the better option?
As the New York City office scene undergoes a significant shift, the buzzword is ‘adaptation.’ Office spaces once brimming with activity now stand amid an era of transformation, with landlords scrambling to meet tenants’ changing needs.
I was recently asked for my opinion regarding the prospects of a recovery in the New York City retail commercial real estate market.
After years and years of political back and forth, the much-discussed Gateway Tunnel, meant to connect New York to New Jersey, has finally been greenlighted.
In the wake of the increasing acceptance of remote and hybrid work models, NYC’s towering office buildings, symbols of Manhattan’s bustling business prominence, face a unique challenge: How to remain relevant, filled, and environmentally friendly in a shifting urban landscape.
Technology has crept its way across all possible industries over the past decades, improving the way we do business and go about our daily lives.
The NYC retail sector is still recovering, and it will take a long time for it to return to its pre-pandemic state, if at all.
Professional sports are a billion-dollar business in the U.S., and American cities are inextricably tied to their home teams.
As vaccination efforts continue across the country and life slowly starts to go back to normal, the New York City commercial real estate market is still recovering.
Commercial real estate is probably not an industry where you’d expect to encounter superstition.
New York City faces an uncertain future once the eviction moratorium ends on August 31, 2021.
As more and more companies embraced remote or hybrid work models in the past year, offices throughout NYC were left eerily vacant.
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