A condo development on Lombardy Street stalled by the recession is back on the table following a $2.3 million sale of the property.
Katie Demeria
The Pipeline: Commercial real estate roundup for March 27, 2015
A long list of deals in this week’s pipeline: $1.8 million worth of commercial property changes hands, the James Center gets a new lease and two businesses sign on to a spot in Scott’s Addition.
Short Pump medical park cuts ribbon on first office
A 60,000-square-foot joint venture between a healthcare firm and a developer celebrated its opening on Thursday in Short Pump.
Incoming grocer sparks new development on Broad Street
With Whole Foods on the way to West Broad Street, a long-vacant commercial space across the street is being rebooted. And the Washington-based owners are looking first for retail tenants.
Southside industrial lot sells for $3.3M
A scrap metal recycling firm has closed on a deal to buy about 75 acres on the Southside after about a year of leasing the space.
HDL cuts a deal with Justice Dept.
Health Diagnostic Laboratory announced Monday that it had come to a tentative agreement to end a federal investigation against it. And the Wall Street Journal puts the price of that settlement at $47 million.
Developer fills out growing neighborhoods
The firm behind Gather co-working space is developing a pipeline of its own filled with a handful of mixed-use redevelopment projects in Church Hill and other growing districts.
Senior living pulls in $31M in new projects
A state senator and a Baptist church are jumping in to the busy senior living market with a pair of new projects in Henrico and Chesterfield counties.
Chinese firm shelves Petersburg plans
A Chinese pharmaceutical company that bought a Petersburg plant late last year has put its $22.5 million plans for the facility on hold, the firm announced Friday.
The Pipeline: Commercial real estate roundup for March 20, 2015
A loaded pipeline this week that includes a pair of multimillion-dollar property transfers and restaurant and retail leases around the Richmond area. Plus, Lumber Liquidators doubles its space in Henrico County.