Search for "development/ownership"
Displaying 1361 to 1380 of 1692 records
Activating a Community to Thrive Beyond the 9-to-5
Thursday, March 13, 2025
An infill rezoning project in Charlotte is changing Ballantyne from a traditional office park to a mixed-use mecca.
NAIOP's 2018 Developing Leaders Award Recipients Talk Tech Tools and Trends
Wednesday, December 19, 2018
CRE disruptors to watch include smart contracts, robotics, big data, autonomous vehicles, 3-D imaging and more.
Prepping the Next Generation of Industry Professionals
Friday, September 12, 2025
Real estate academic programs and CRE firms can partner to better prepare students for real-world conditions.
NAIOP Launches Detroit Chapter
Monday, February 10, 2025
NAIOP’s board of directors officially approved the newest chapter in Detroit during their meeting last week, held during NAIOP’s annual Chapter Leadership & Legislative Retreat in
NAIOP Commends Senate, Urges House to Act on Budget Reconciliation Bill
Tuesday, July 1, 2025
NAIOP President and CEO Marc Selvitelli issued the following statement on the July 1 Senate passage of President Donald Trump’s budget reconciliation bill.
The Complexity of Urban Waterfront Redevelopment
Sunday, July 1, 2012
Waterfront brownfield regeneration is extraordinarily complex; incorporating ecology, land use, community benefits, hydrology, real estate economics, design and a host of associated disciplines.
open_in_new Hayes Spencer
Tuesday, December 6, 2022
Spencer Hayes
Spencer Hayes is an Executive Managing Director for Cushman & Wakefield. He served as the C&W Managing Principal for Austin/San Antonio from 2016-2021, during which time the he led the
Rightsizing Parking in Support of Sustainability and ROI
Wednesday, December 20, 2023
Shared parking analyses can help save land, costs and time.
NAIOP: Commercial Real Estate Sentiment Declines Amid Growing Caution
Friday, April 11, 2025
The NAIOP CRE Sentiment Index, which measures industry expectations for commercial real estate market conditions over the next 12 months, has dropped to 50 – down from 56 in Fall 2024. This
Breathing New Life into Old Office Parks
Friday, December 20, 2019
By adding new uses and amenities, older properties can be remade into magnets for younger skilled workers.
Robotic Furniture
Friday, March 23, 2018
North American developers are animating small spaces with architectural robotics.
Nominations for Developer of the Year 2024 are Open
Tuesday, January 16, 2024
NAIOP Developer of the Year Award
NAIOP Conference Speakers
Nominations for Developer of the Year 2024 are Open
Nominate by Feb. 22
The Rebirth of Older Industrial Cities
Thursday, April 1, 2004
Strategies are offered to overcome obstacles to urban redevelopment based on five sites in Massachusetts and six key industrial sectors. This report addresses problems related to zoning, brownfields
Stirling Market Insights: Baton Rouge MSA, Louisiana, Q225
Wednesday, September 24, 2025
Stirling’s report provides a comprehensive market analysis of the New Orleans Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) for Q2 2025, covering retail, office, industrial, multifamily and
COVID-19: An Unprecedented Situation Demands an Extraordinary Response
Wednesday, June 10, 2020
NAIOP rises to the challenge.
Inclusion in CRE Scholarship Programs
Thursday, January 23, 2025
Inclusion in CRE Scholarship Programs
Inclusion in CRE Scholarship Programs
Creative Industrial Workspaces
As industrial users consolidate operations under one roof, “creative industrial” is becoming the future of industrial space.Building a More Diverse Future CRE Workforce
Wednesday, June 6, 2018
New NAIOP-sponsored educational programs enable gifted and talented minority teens to explore careers in commercial real estate.
NAIOP's National Forums: The Power of Relationships
Monday, June 10, 2019
Five members of the association’s Deal and Investment Concepts Forum tell how members bond through relevant, in-depth conversations in a noncompetitive setting.
Suburbs, Edge Cities and Santa Fe: A Conversation with Joel Garreau
Thursday, September 23, 2021
The influential author sees the next boom towns emerging in smaller cities that are “urbane without the burdens of being urban.”