A Richmond developer bought 5 acres for $2.7 million and is planning a project with townhomes, a hotel, office and retail space.
Commercial Real Estate
F.W. Sullivan’s in the Fan closes for good; building up for sale
“We’re a social center and that doesn’t work in the time of social distancing,” F.W. Sullivan’s owner Jake Crocker said. “You could charge $100 for a half-dozen wings or $20 a bud light and it won’t cover the overhead.”
Zorch Pizza finds a place to park in Carytown
“I’ve never expected it,” Rob Zorch said of his namesake pizza venture. “I just always thought we’d be a little slice truck.”
Hard Hat Happy Hour Virtual Tour: Hill Standard
We’re headed to Forest Hill for the latest monthly installment of the Hard Hat Happy Hour Virtual Tour, presented by Sands Anderson.
5-building West End medical office park sells for $12M to out-of-town investor
With two deals in two months totaling $15 million, an out-of-town real estate investor has completed a double-dip in Richmond. And it has more in mind.
Project Snapshot: Triangular lot filling out in Union Hill
Three years after the project was initially approved, a scaled-down version of a mixed-use development beside a prominent neighborhood crossroads is getting going in Union Hill.
1,000-acre Goochland events venue plans expansion — airstrip included
Rassawek Vineyard wants to expand its offerings to include camping, short-term rentals, a zip line course and a retail store.
As some retail and restaurant rents have gone unpaid, some landlords’ patience wears thin
A Red Lobster location in Midlothian is the latest local commercial tenant to have allegedly fallen behind on its rent since the pandemic began, resulting in one of a handful of similar lawsuits.
Buyer of former Lighthouse Diner property acquires more along Hull Street
Relative newcomer to the Manchester development scene buys a half-acre site housing only a 1,000-square-foot garage for $1.17 million.
Selling Scott’s Addition HQ for double its cost sounds good to recording studio
“The offer we got was kind of ridiculous,” Sound of Music co-owner John Morand said.