ATLANTA-The nation's second largest wireless carrier after Verizon Wireless Inc. will be moving this fall into space originally developed by the Barry Real Estate Cos. for Nortel Networks Inc. of Ottawa, Canada.
ORLANDO-A ground-breaking date hasn't been set for the unnamed 600-unit, 12-building vacation rental venture on 60 acres adjacent to Disney's Eagle Pines golf course in Lake Buena Vista, FL, 20 miles south of Downtown Orlando. Estimated hard cost: $15 million.
CHARLOTTE-AvidXchange plans to introduce new software in August targeted at commercial real estate and property management companies. Cleveland-based Management Reports International will help market the procurement products. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.
ATLANTA-The locally based homebuilding, mortgage and title insurance company sets new company highs in its third fiscal quarter, showing net income at $19.9 million, up 88% over the comparable 2000 period.
ORLANDO-S.I. Goldman Co., a 42-year-old, $40 million mechanical contracting firm that has worked on every major commercial construction job in metro Orlando in the past 20 years, is suing its former $175,000-a-year president on charges of client stealing, conspiracy and fraud. The executive is countersuing for breach of contract.
ORLANDO-With one million acres to play with in sparsely-populated northwest Florida, the locally based commercial real estate arm of publicly traded St. Joe Co., plans to enter the retail arena for the first time and develop eight high-traffic sites that could house a maximum 800,000 sf of new product.
TAVARES, FL-Multifamily and single-family projects help jump the tax roll to $8.46 billion, up 10% from $784 million the previous year in a county with only 210,528 permanent residents. Tavares, the county seat, is 38 miles northwest of Downtown Orlando.
ORLANDO-The U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration opened a formal investigation today in the death of a 36-year-old construction worker whose harness broke as he was working on a rooftop scaffold, 60 feet above the Orange County Convention Center's floor.
ORLANDO-The U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration opened a formal investigation today in the death of a 36-year-old construction worker whose harness broke as he was working on a rooftop scaffold, 60 feet above the Orange County Convention Center's floor.