Atlanta brewery Steady Hand Beer closes after six years

Atlanta brewery Steady Hand Beer closes after six years

Atlanta brewery Steady Hand Beer closes after six years

The closure comes amid redevelopment efforts for the brewery’s property.

​  The closure comes amid redevelopment efforts for the brewery’s property. Read MoreBizjournals.com Feed (2019-09-06 17:16:48)

The closure comes amid redevelopment efforts for the brewery’s property.

Atlanta brewery Steady Hand Beer closes after six years

Atlanta brewery Steady Hand Beer closes after six years

Atlanta brewery Steady Hand Beer closes after six years

The closure comes amid redevelopment efforts for the brewery’s property.

​  The closure comes amid redevelopment efforts for the brewery’s property. Read MoreBizjournals.com Feed (2022-04-02 21:43:57)

The closure comes amid redevelopment efforts for the brewery’s property.

8 random reasons to be thankful for Atlanta right now

8 random reasons to be thankful for Atlanta right now

8 random reasons to be thankful for Atlanta right now

8 random reasons to be thankful for Atlanta right now

Josh Green

Tue, 11/26/2024 – 12:27

Thanksgiving is a time of reflection, gratitude, and gluttony. And for ATL lovers, it’s an apt occasion for self-promotion, too!

There are thousands of good reasons, for those who can still afford it, to be thankful for living in the American South’s capital city right now. It’s a time of relative prosperity in a modern-day boomtown where none of the local sports teams are sniffing last place, though the Hawks are trying. It’s currently sunny, T-shirt weather in late November. And oh by golly, the famed Pink Pig is finally back (sort of).

Below are eight other random reasons to be thankful for calling Atlanta home right now. Please, in the comments below, feel free to add to the list with your own personal ATL thanksgivings:

1. We’re No. 6! No, seriously, since the pandemic, metro Atlanta has leapfrogged three other metros to firmly stake our claim as the sixth largest in the U.S. Which is pretty impressive.

2. A YouTuber/city planner/engineer with an international following just wondered aloud if the Atlanta Beltline isn’t America’s best urban trail. He also said this: “It’s hard to spend any time in Atlanta and not feel like you’re in America’s city of the future.”


The latest Beltline section to open this month, in relation to Piedmont Park’s dog park. Photo by LoKnows Drones; courtesy of Atlanta Beltline Inc.

3. The amount of places for Atlantans to live that are still comfortably affordable is hardly meeting the need, as post-pandemic housing costs have shot through the roof. But as new and forthcoming projects from Decatur to the doorstep of MARTA’s Hamilton E. Holmes station prove, affordable housing initiatives across the ITP universe are more than just lip service around here.

4. Gulch redevelopment Centennial Yards make take lumps for its monumental tax breaks and lack of affordable housing (so far), but damn it’s nice to see that soul-sucking downtown chasm finally becoming something else.

Here it is, as seen from an airplane, earlier this month:

5. Yes, haters, it’s not Germany, but the Atlanta Christkindl Market in Buckhead Village is becoming a fine tradition—one that’s more than capable of conjuring that warm feeling of holiday sentimentality. Go ahead—fight us.

6. The dazzling Atlanta Botanical Garden this time of year. Enough said?


Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta

7. Day-brightening characters like Kevin “the singing Rollerblader” Randolph are now Beltline fixtures. Yes, please.

8. If you ride a bike in the evening, heading east into Midtown, sometimes a reflective, golden-hour scene like this happens:  


Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta


Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta


Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta


Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta

Follow us on social media: 

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Forbes declares Atlanta the ‘most educated city in America’ (Urbanize Atlanta)

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She’s not perfect, but we’re all pretty fortunate to be here
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8 random reasons to be thankful for Atlanta right now

Josh Green

Tue, 11/26/2024 – 12:27

Thanksgiving is a time of reflection, gratitude, and gluttony. And for ATL lovers, it’s an apt occasion for self-promotion, too!

There are thousands of good reasons, for those who can still afford it, to be thankful for living in the American South’s capital city right now. It’s a time of relative prosperity in a modern-day boomtown where none of the local sports teams are sniffing last place, though the Hawks are trying. It’s currently sunny, T-shirt weather in late November. And oh by golly, the famed Pink Pig is finally back (sort of).

Below are eight other random reasons to be thankful for calling Atlanta home right now. Please, in the comments below, feel free to add to the list with your own personal ATL thanksgivings:

1. We’re No. 6! No, seriously, since the pandemic, metro Atlanta has leapfrogged three other metros to firmly stake our claim as the sixth largest in the U.S. Which is pretty impressive.

2. A YouTuber/city planner/engineer with an international following just wondered aloud if the Atlanta Beltline isn’t America’s best urban trail. He also said this: “It’s hard to spend any time in Atlanta and not feel like you’re in America’s city of the future.”

The latest Beltline section to open this month, in relation to Piedmont Park’s dog park. Photo by LoKnows Drones; courtesy of Atlanta Beltline Inc.

3. The amount of places for Atlantans to live that are still comfortably affordable is hardly meeting the need, as post-pandemic housing costs have shot through the roof. But as new and forthcoming projects from Decatur to the doorstep of MARTA’s Hamilton E. Holmes station prove, affordable housing initiatives across the ITP universe are more than just lip service around here.

4. Gulch redevelopment Centennial Yards make take lumps for its monumental tax breaks and lack of affordable housing (so far), but damn it’s nice to see that soul-sucking downtown chasm finally becoming something else.

Here it is, as seen from an airplane, earlier this month:

5. Yes, haters, it’s not Germany, but the Atlanta Christkindl Market in Buckhead Village is becoming a fine tradition—one that’s more than capable of conjuring that warm feeling of holiday sentimentality. Go ahead—fight us.

6. The dazzling Atlanta Botanical Garden this time of year. Enough said?

Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta

7. Day-brightening characters like Kevin “the singing Rollerblader” Randolph are now Beltline fixtures. Yes, please.

8. If you ride a bike in the evening, heading east into Midtown, sometimes a reflective, golden-hour scene like this happens:  

Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta

Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta

Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta

Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta

Follow us on social media: 

Twitter / Facebook/and now: Instagram  

• Forbes declares Atlanta the ‘most educated city in America’ (Urbanize Atlanta)

Tags

Midtown Atlanta
The Gulch
Centennial Yards
Atlanta Botanical Garden
Beltline
Atlanta BeltLine
CityNerd
City Nerd
Buckhead
German Christkindl Market
German Holiday Market
Atlanta Development

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She’s not perfect, but we’re all pretty fortunate to be here

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Citywide

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8 random reasons to be thankful for Atlanta right now

Josh Green

Tue, 11/26/2024 – 12:27

Thanksgiving is a time of reflection, gratitude, and gluttony. And for ATL lovers, it’s an apt occasion for self-promotion, too!

There are thousands of good reasons, for those who can still afford it, to be thankful for living in the American South’s capital city right now. It’s a time of relative prosperity in a modern-day boomtown where none of the local sports teams are sniffing last place, though the Hawks are trying. It’s currently sunny, T-shirt weather in late November. And oh by golly, the famed Pink Pig is finally back (sort of).

Below are eight other random reasons to be thankful for calling Atlanta home right now. Please, in the comments below, feel free to add to the list with your own personal ATL thanksgivings:

1. We’re No. 6! No, seriously, since the pandemic, metro Atlanta has leapfrogged three other metros to firmly stake our claim as the sixth largest in the U.S. Which is pretty impressive.

2. A YouTuber/city planner/engineer with an international following just wondered aloud if the Atlanta Beltline isn’t America’s best urban trail. He also said this: “It’s hard to spend any time in Atlanta and not feel like you’re in America’s city of the future.”

The latest Beltline section to open this month, in relation to Piedmont Park’s dog park. Photo by LoKnows Drones; courtesy of Atlanta Beltline Inc.

3. The amount of places for Atlantans to live that are still comfortably affordable is hardly meeting the need, as post-pandemic housing costs have shot through the roof. But as new and forthcoming projects from Decatur to the doorstep of MARTA’s Hamilton E. Holmes station prove, affordable housing initiatives across the ITP universe are more than just lip service around here.

4. Gulch redevelopment Centennial Yards make take lumps for its monumental tax breaks and lack of affordable housing (so far), but damn it’s nice to see that soul-sucking downtown chasm finally becoming something else.

Here it is, as seen from an airplane, earlier this month:

5. Yes, haters, it’s not Germany, but the Atlanta Christkindl Market in Buckhead Village is becoming a fine tradition—one that’s more than capable of conjuring that warm feeling of holiday sentimentality. Go ahead—fight us.

6. The dazzling Atlanta Botanical Garden this time of year. Enough said?

Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta

7. Day-brightening characters like Kevin “the singing Rollerblader” Randolph are now Beltline fixtures. Yes, please.

8. If you ride a bike in the evening, heading east into Midtown, sometimes a reflective, golden-hour scene like this happens:  

Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta

Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta

Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta

Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta

Follow us on social media: 

Twitter / Facebook/and now: Instagram  

• Forbes declares Atlanta the ‘most educated city in America’ (Urbanize Atlanta)

Tags

Midtown Atlanta
The Gulch
Centennial Yards
Atlanta Botanical Garden
Beltline
Atlanta BeltLine
CityNerd
City Nerd
Buckhead
German Christkindl Market
German Holiday Market
Atlanta Development

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She’s not perfect, but we’re all pretty fortunate to be here

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Atlanta Apartment Owner Attempting Sale After Defaulting On Arbor Realty Trust Loan

Atlanta Apartment Owner Attempting Sale After Defaulting On Arbor Realty Trust Loan

Atlanta Apartment Owner Attempting Sale After Defaulting On Arbor Realty Trust Loan

A 1970s-era College Park apartment complex is being marketed for sale as the lender mulls a possible foreclosure on its $37M loan. 

​  A 1970s-era College Park apartment complex is being marketed for sale as the lender mulls a possible foreclosure on its $37M loan.  Read MoreBisnow News Feed

A 1970s-era College Park apartment complex is being marketed for sale as the lender mulls a possible foreclosure on its $37M loan. 

Historic property with Outkast ties floated for redevelopment

Historic property with Outkast ties floated for redevelopment

Historic property with Outkast ties floated for redevelopment

Historic property with Outkast ties floated for redevelopment

Josh Green

Mon, 11/25/2024 – 18:15

Anyone with a soft spot for classic, early aughts music videos or Atlanta hip-hop royalty might recognize this landmark complex in Castleberry Hill.

As the name implies, the circa-1930 American Laundry Building on Walker Street once served as a location where local railroad workers would drop off and retrieve laundry in the neighborhood’s manufacturing and industrial heyday.

More importantly, André 3000 and Big Boi once worked there together.

The building—with its airy interiors and cool, postindustrial vibe—was an apt setting for the somewhat racy early morning scenes in the video for Outkast’s “So Fresh, So Clean,” the third and final single from 2000’s seminal album Stankonia. (How perfect a building with “laundry” in its name was used for that song’s video, which has 60 million YouTube views and counting).


Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.


This bathtub played a starring role in the classic Outkast video. Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Now, with the 2026 FIFA World Cup on the horizon and Gulch redevelopment clearly underway, the nearly century-old building is trying to attract new owners—and potentially new life.

The 256 Walker St. property came to market with commercial firm Bull Realty on Friday, presenting what sellers call “incredible character” across its buildings, as well as “endless opportunities for creative uses, adaptive-reuse, or redevelopment.”

What’s the .42-acre property entail, exactly?


Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.


Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

The two-story American Laundry building itself spans about 10,000 square feet (the main façade, while inimitable, is neither fresh nor particularly clean, as is.) Next door is a roughly 3,000-square-foot courtyard, and what’s called an open-air building of 1,200 square feet—aka, lovely old brick walls.

Also included is what Bull Realty estimates to be 27 parking spaces on site.   

Perks of the location include walkability to Mercedes-Benz Stadium and new attractions around Centennial Yards in about 10 minutes, per listings. The property, which has been used as coworking spaces, a private residence, and an events venue, also came up for grabs five years ago, when it was asking $4.5 million.

The unlisted new price, according to Bull Realty partner Michael Wess, is in the “high $2 million range.”

Find more context and a closer look in the gallery above. Proper hygiene not required. 


Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Follow us on social media: 

Twitter / Facebook/and now: Instagram  

• Castleberry Hill news, discussion (Urbanize Atlanta) 

Images


Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.


Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.


Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.


Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.


This bathtub played a starring role in the classic Outkast video. Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.


Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.


Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.


Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.


Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.


Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.


Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Subtitle
Castleberry Hill’s 1930s American Laundry complex presents “endless opportunities,” per sellers
Neighborhood
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Historic property with Outkast ties floated for redevelopment

Josh Green

Mon, 11/25/2024 – 18:15

Anyone with a soft spot for classic, early aughts music videos or Atlanta hip-hop royalty might recognize this landmark complex in Castleberry Hill.

As the name implies, the circa-1930 American Laundry Building on Walker Street once served as a location where local railroad workers would drop off and retrieve laundry in the neighborhood’s manufacturing and industrial heyday.

More importantly, André 3000 and Big Boi once worked there together.

The building—with its airy interiors and cool, postindustrial vibe—was an apt setting for the somewhat racy early morning scenes in the video for Outkast’s “So Fresh, So Clean,” the third and final single from 2000’s seminal album Stankonia. (How perfect a building with “laundry” in its name was used for that song’s video, which has 60 million YouTube views and counting).

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

This bathtub played a starring role in the classic Outkast video. Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Now, with the 2026 FIFA World Cup on the horizon and Gulch redevelopment clearly underway, the nearly century-old building is trying to attract new owners—and potentially new life.

The 256 Walker St. property came to market with commercial firm Bull Realty on Friday, presenting what sellers call “incredible character” across its buildings, as well as “endless opportunities for creative uses, adaptive-reuse, or redevelopment.”

What’s the .42-acre property entail, exactly?

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

The two-story American Laundry building itself spans about 10,000 square feet (the main façade, while inimitable, is neither fresh nor particularly clean, as is.) Next door is a roughly 3,000-square-foot courtyard, and what’s called an open-air building of 1,200 square feet—aka, lovely old brick walls.

Also included is what Bull Realty estimates to be 27 parking spaces on site.   

Perks of the location include walkability to Mercedes-Benz Stadium and new attractions around Centennial Yards in about 10 minutes, per listings. The property, which has been used as coworking spaces, a private residence, and an events venue, also came up for grabs five years ago, when it was asking $4.5 million.

The unlisted new price, according to Bull Realty partner Michael Wess, is in the “high $2 million range.”

Find more context and a closer look in the gallery above. Proper hygiene not required. 

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Follow us on social media: 

Twitter / Facebook/and now: Instagram  

• Castleberry Hill news, discussion (Urbanize Atlanta) 

Tags

256 Walker St. SW
Bull Realty
Castleberry Hill Development
Atlanta History
Atlanta Architecture
Historic Atlanta
Outkast
So Fresh So Clean
Downtown Atlanta
Downtown Atlanta Projects
Adaptive-Reuse Development
Adaptive-Reuse
American Laundry Building

Images

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

This bathtub played a starring role in the classic Outkast video. Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Subtitle
Castleberry Hill’s 1930s American Laundry complex presents “endless opportunities,” per sellers

Neighborhood
Castleberry Hill

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Before/After Images

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Historic property with Outkast ties floated for redevelopment

Josh Green

Mon, 11/25/2024 – 18:15

Anyone with a soft spot for classic, early aughts music videos or Atlanta hip-hop royalty might recognize this landmark complex in Castleberry Hill.

As the name implies, the circa-1930 American Laundry Building on Walker Street once served as a location where local railroad workers would drop off and retrieve laundry in the neighborhood’s manufacturing and industrial heyday.

More importantly, André 3000 and Big Boi once worked there together.

The building—with its airy interiors and cool, postindustrial vibe—was an apt setting for the somewhat racy early morning scenes in the video for Outkast’s “So Fresh, So Clean,” the third and final single from 2000’s seminal album Stankonia. (How perfect a building with “laundry” in its name was used for that song’s video, which has 60 million YouTube views and counting).

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

This bathtub played a starring role in the classic Outkast video. Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Now, with the 2026 FIFA World Cup on the horizon and Gulch redevelopment clearly underway, the nearly century-old building is trying to attract new owners—and potentially new life.

The 256 Walker St. property came to market with commercial firm Bull Realty on Friday, presenting what sellers call “incredible character” across its buildings, as well as “endless opportunities for creative uses, adaptive-reuse, or redevelopment.”

What’s the .42-acre property entail, exactly?

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

The two-story American Laundry building itself spans about 10,000 square feet (the main façade, while inimitable, is neither fresh nor particularly clean, as is.) Next door is a roughly 3,000-square-foot courtyard, and what’s called an open-air building of 1,200 square feet—aka, lovely old brick walls.

Also included is what Bull Realty estimates to be 27 parking spaces on site.   

Perks of the location include walkability to Mercedes-Benz Stadium and new attractions around Centennial Yards in about 10 minutes, per listings. The property, which has been used as coworking spaces, a private residence, and an events venue, also came up for grabs five years ago, when it was asking $4.5 million.

The unlisted new price, according to Bull Realty partner Michael Wess, is in the “high $2 million range.”

Find more context and a closer look in the gallery above. Proper hygiene not required. 

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Follow us on social media: 

Twitter / Facebook/and now: Instagram  

• Castleberry Hill news, discussion (Urbanize Atlanta) 

Tags

256 Walker St. SW
Bull Realty
Castleberry Hill Development
Atlanta History
Atlanta Architecture
Historic Atlanta
Outkast
So Fresh So Clean
Downtown Atlanta
Downtown Atlanta Projects
Adaptive-Reuse Development
Adaptive-Reuse
American Laundry Building

Images

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

This bathtub played a starring role in the classic Outkast video. Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Courtesy of Bull Realty Inc.

Subtitle
Castleberry Hill’s 1930s American Laundry complex presents “endless opportunities,” per sellers

Neighborhood
Castleberry Hill

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Before/After Images

Sponsored Post
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EoS Fitness to Open 50 Georgia Locations

EoS Fitness to Open 50 Georgia Locations

EoS Fitness to Open 50 Georgia Locations

EoS Fitness is expanding into greater Atlanta. With plans to open over 50 locations throughout Georgia over the next ten years, EoS is set to open its first several gyms by 2027.

EoS has over 175 locations open or on the way in Arizona, California, Florida, Nevada, Texas and Utah. Georgia is part of the company’s broader strategy to surpass 250 gyms nationwide by 2030, reinforcing its commitment to providing communities with a premium fitness option featuring a variety of exceptional amenities at an accessible price point.

Each new location represents a $10 million investment and brings 40-60 jobs. The company plans to open more than 30 gyms in 2025.

EoS Fitness locations in the greater Atlanta area will average between 40,000 and 50,000 square feet.

The post EoS Fitness to Open 50 Georgia Locations appeared first on Connect CRE.

​  EoS Fitness is expanding into greater Atlanta. With plans to open over 50 locations throughout Georgia over the next ten years, EoS is set to open its first several gyms by 2027. EoS has over 175 locations open or on the way in Arizona, California, Florida, Nevada, Texas and Utah. Georgia is part of the …
The post EoS Fitness to Open 50 Georgia Locations appeared first on Connect CRE. Read MoreAtlanta & Southeast Commercial Real Estate News

EoS Fitness is expanding into greater Atlanta. With plans to open over 50 locations throughout Georgia over the next ten years, EoS is set to open its first several gyms by 2027. EoS has over 175 locations open or on the way in Arizona, California, Florida, Nevada, Texas and Utah. Georgia is part of the …
The post EoS Fitness to Open 50 Georgia Locations appeared first on Connect CRE.

‘Everything’s Empty’ As Remote Work Impacts Central Perimeter Hotels

‘Everything’s Empty’ As Remote Work Impacts Central Perimeter Hotels

‘Everything’s Empty’ As Remote Work Impacts Central Perimeter Hotels

Atlanta’s hotel market has faced headwinds in 2024 so far, but those have been blowing at a gale force for hoteliers in Central Perimeter. 

​  Atlanta’s hotel market has faced headwinds in 2024 so far, but those have been blowing at a gale force for hoteliers in Central Perimeter.  Read MoreBisnow News Feed

Atlanta’s hotel market has faced headwinds in 2024 so far, but those have been blowing at a gale force for hoteliers in Central Perimeter. 

Branch to Redevelop Gainesville Mall

Branch to Redevelop Gainesville Mall

Branch to Redevelop Gainesville Mall

Branch Properties plans to reimagine Gainesville’s Lakeshore Mall into a walkable, open-air destination. The mixed-use redevelopment will retain key retail tenants while introducing new residential and retail elements. The first step in the extensive, multi-year planning process is filing the Development of Regional Impact (DRI), which supports community input. 

Originally opened in 1970, Lakeshore Mall currently comprises 492,798 square feet of retail space. Dick’s Sporting Goods and Belk will remain active throughout the process, and Dick’s Sporting Goods will be relocated on the property. At full buildout, Branch proposes 305,444 square feet of retail space, 652 units of multifamily residential units and 38,200 square feet of outdoor community greenspace. Lakeshore will also have the capacity for a hotel and townhomes in future development. 

Branch Properties acquired the asset in 2022 and plans to break ground on the redevelopment in late 2026. Franklin Street’s Len Erickson will handle retail leasing in partnership with Branch Properties.

The post Branch to Redevelop Gainesville Mall appeared first on Connect CRE.

​  Branch Properties plans to reimagine Gainesville’s Lakeshore Mall into a walkable, open-air destination. The mixed-use redevelopment will retain key retail tenants while introducing new residential and retail elements. The first step in the extensive, multi-year planning process is filing the Development of Regional Impact (DRI), which supports community input.  Originally opened in 1970, Lakeshore Mall …
The post Branch to Redevelop Gainesville Mall appeared first on Connect CRE. Read MoreAtlanta & Southeast Commercial Real Estate News

Branch Properties plans to reimagine Gainesville’s Lakeshore Mall into a walkable, open-air destination. The mixed-use redevelopment will retain key retail tenants while introducing new residential and retail elements. The first step in the extensive, multi-year planning process is filing the Development of Regional Impact (DRI), which supports community input.  Originally opened in 1970, Lakeshore Mall …
The post Branch to Redevelop Gainesville Mall appeared first on Connect CRE.

KISCO Obtains $71.3M Refi of Greensboro Sr. Care Facility

KISCO Obtains $71.3M Refi of Greensboro Sr. Care Facility

KISCO Obtains $71.3M Refi of Greensboro Sr. Care Facility

KISCO Senior Living obtained a $71.3 million refinancing of the Abbotswood at Irving Park, a senior living community in Greensboro.

Berkadia’s Austin Sacco, Steve Muth, Garrett Sacco and Alec Rosenfeld of Berkadia Seniors Housing & Healthcare, secured the financing through Freddie Mac on behalf of KISCO.

Located at 3504 Flint Street, Abbotswood at Irving Park offers a full spectrum of senior living options, including premier cottages, independent living residences, assisted living apartments, and memory support suites. The facility provides a variety of amenities; residents enjoy chef-prepared meals, concierge services, wellness programs, transportation services, and events and activities.

Kisco Senior Living specializes in full-service, private-pay senior living communities. Based in Carlsbad, California, it owns and operates 20 senior living communities in six states, including 6 communities in North Carolina.

The post KISCO Obtains $71.3M Refi of Greensboro Sr. Care Facility appeared first on Connect CRE.

​  KISCO Senior Living obtained a $71.3 million refinancing of the Abbotswood at Irving Park, a senior living community in Greensboro. Berkadia’s Austin Sacco, Steve Muth, Garrett Sacco and Alec Rosenfeld of Berkadia Seniors Housing & Healthcare, secured the financing through Freddie Mac on behalf of KISCO. Located at 3504 Flint Street, Abbotswood at Irving Park …
The post KISCO Obtains $71.3M Refi of Greensboro Sr. Care Facility appeared first on Connect CRE. Read MoreAtlanta & Southeast Commercial Real Estate News

KISCO Senior Living obtained a $71.3 million refinancing of the Abbotswood at Irving Park, a senior living community in Greensboro. Berkadia’s Austin Sacco, Steve Muth, Garrett Sacco and Alec Rosenfeld of Berkadia Seniors Housing & Healthcare, secured the financing through Freddie Mac on behalf of KISCO. Located at 3504 Flint Street, Abbotswood at Irving Park …
The post KISCO Obtains $71.3M Refi of Greensboro Sr. Care Facility appeared first on Connect CRE.