
Richmond’s mayor names his chief of staff to be the city’s top administrator, Chesterfield funds buying a shopping center, and a 2,000-home project is OK’d next to Westchester Commons.
Richmond’s mayor names his chief of staff to be the city’s top administrator, Chesterfield funds buying a shopping center, and a 2,000-home project is OK’d next to Westchester Commons.
In case you missed these stories over the last week, we have news of the city’s tallest building being potentially on the chopping block, some churn in the Rocketts Landing restaurant scene, a new national retailer eyes Short Pump, and more.
A vape shop, a jeweler and a driving school in Henrico. Chesterfield gains contractors, retail and more. For the entire list, become a BizSense Pro member.
The purchase of 24 units in Richmond for $3.2 million was the week’s top sale and 88,000 square feet in Henrico was the top lease.
A man sues for $2.5 million after falling through his apartment’s floor, and another sues Chick-Fil-A for $500,000 after being burned by hot coffee. BizSense Pro members have access to the entire docket.
Earnings galore as second quarter reporting season continues. Plus two local REITs close on acquisitions.
This week’s patents include automated multi-platform testing, a non-combustible smoking device and long-range sonar.
A commercial brokerage hires a vice president, an engineering firm names stockholders, plus new faces and promotions in real estate, finance, marketing, hospitality and more.
A 2,000-home development beside Westchester Commons is up for a vote, the 475-unit Oasis Park project advances, and Henrico starts an update to its comprehensive plan.
Properties to be auctioned in Henrico, Hanover, Chesterfield, Powhatan and Prince George.
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