
The recent sale of a restaurant parcel is making a Henrico County shopping center whole again.
The recent sale of a restaurant parcel is making a Henrico County shopping center whole again.
The concept for a recently closed Northside neighborhood coffee shop space is about to change, while a short-lived Southside restaurant calls it quits.
Secret Sandwich Society, a West Virginia restaurant brand, is preparing to launch its first Richmond location at 501 E. Grace St. in the coming days.
Less than two months after hitting the market, a trio of downtown towers encompassing nearly 1 million square feet of office space has found a suitor.
“Where we are now, no one gets to see how we make the chocolates, what goes into the chocolate making process,” owner Kelly Walker Wombold said. “Now, with us moving downtown, they’ll be able to see what goes into the process…it’s what our customers wanted.”
An out-of-town restaurant group is taking a dip into the local dining scene, as it plots its first fish and shrimp outpost in the Richmond area.
The effort, designed in light of growing brewery workforce demand fueled by the rise of independent beer makers, is the only brewing certificate program offered by a private university in the state.
A vacant Meadow Street bakery is ready to be reheated, as a pastry chef plans to carve a place for her European- and French-inspired eatery.
A Norfolk-based commercial brokerage with ties to Richmond has purchased the bulk of a Kroger-anchored shopping center in Midlothian.
Following their recent purchase of a storefront in Jackson Ward, a local couple’s plan for the neighborhood’s first juice and yoga bar is beginning to bear fruit.
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