Thalhimer had planned a mixed-use building with 150 apartments and an HCA emergency center as the commercial tenant. Now, apartments are off the table, while HCA’s plans continue on.
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Capital Square scraps plans for new Short Pump HQ
The Henrico-based real estate firm had intended to build a four-story, 65,000-square-foot office in West Broad Village but instead has sold the parcel back to the owner of the shopping center.
Naborforce expands yet again, this time to D.C. and Savannah
“With the aging of the population, our services are needed everywhere,” said founder Paige Wilson. “And our goal is to be nationwide.”
Engineering firm VHB leaving Canal Crossing for James Center
The move to Two James Center will give the Boston-based firm and its 60 local employees more space as it also looks for more cohesion between its Richmond and Hampton Roads operations.
Fulton Bank snags shuttered Wells Fargo branch for new West End outpost
The $27 billion Pennsylvania-based bank plans to relocate its Innsbrook-area branch at 4180 Dominion Blvd. to a building at the corner of Parham Road and West Broad Street following a round of renovations.
Dodson converting former Circuit arcade-bar into sports bar-card shop combo
Duke Dodson is preparing to open Parlay Bar & Lounge at 3117 W. Leigh St., where he’ll also relocate his Graybo’s Sports Cards retail shop from Grace Street.
Two separate proposals to bring a combined 500 apartments to South Richmond
Dallas-based Trammell Crow Residential and Tennessee-based Elmington is planning roughly the same number of units at two sites near Semmes and Cowardin avenues.
Indoor farming startup rolls out units aimed at K-12 schools
Scott’s Addition-based Babylon Micro-Farms recently unveiled The STEM Garden, a hydroponic device used to grow vegetables indoors and geared toward classroom instruction.
The R&D Dept.: Local patent roundup for 4.24.24
Patents for Capital One, Dupont, Dominion Brush and more. (BizSense Pro required)
Assessing assessments: How some city property owners question valuations amid rising prices
In a tight real estate market in a sought-after city, the inexact science of valuing Richmond’s 76,000 properties can leave owners and assessors at odds.