Two hotels planned near Emory University Midtown Hospital
Two hotels planned near Emory University Midtown Hospital
Combined, the hotels could bring almost 400 new hotel rooms to the market in Downtown Atlanta.
Combined, the hotels could bring almost 400 new hotel rooms to the market in Downtown Atlanta. Read MoreBizjournals.com Feed (2019-09-06 17:16:48)
Combined, the hotels could bring almost 400 new hotel rooms to the market in Downtown Atlanta.
Two hotels planned near Emory University Midtown Hospital
Two hotels planned near Emory University Midtown Hospital
Combined, the hotels could bring almost 400 new hotel rooms to the market in Downtown Atlanta.
Combined, the hotels could bring almost 400 new hotel rooms to the market in Downtown Atlanta. Read MoreBizjournals.com Feed (2022-04-02 21:43:57)
Combined, the hotels could bring almost 400 new hotel rooms to the market in Downtown Atlanta.
‘Walkable, urban oasis’ in northern ‘burbs officially starts construction
‘Walkable, urban oasis’ in northern ‘burbs officially starts construction
‘Walkable, urban oasis’ in northern ‘burbs officially starts construction
Josh Green
Wed, 01/15/2025 – 12:42
After two and ½ years of planning, demolition, and financing negotiations, Johns Creek’s long-held dream of building a city center is officially underway as of this week, according to city and development officials.
Atlanta-based Toro Development Company on Monday announced the groundbreaking—and set a firm grand-opening date—for the $560-million, 43-acre Medley district in the well-to-do north Fulton County city.
According to TDC officials, Medley marks one of the only mixed-use projects of such complexity and scale to break ground nationally this year, as a lending environment they described as “frigid” lingers.
Prior to this week’s groundbreaking, Medley has managed to sign leases with more than 25 brands, including the first OTP outposts for beloved intown food-and-beverage concepts. A 350,000-square-foot office building at the site previously occupied by State Farm Insurance Co. has also been razed, while a smaller, four-story office structure will be adaptively reused and woven into new streets and plazas.
According to TDC, Medley is now set to open on Oct. 29, 2026. It will claim a moribund site surrounded by (obviously) alluring demographics where Johns Creek Parkway meets McGinnis Ferry Road.
Projected look of Medley’s repurposed office building, next to a standalone restaurant and central plaza. Courtesy of Toro Development Company
Earlier overview of the Medley site’s two mid-rise office buildings formerly occupied by State Farm Insurance Co. The building at bottom is being incorporated into the new project; the other has been razed. Google Maps
TDC head Mark Toro said Medley’s broader goal is to create a “third place” from a “dead, suburban office park” where people can socialize and enjoy life outside of work and home.
“Similar to bringing Avalon to life from the rubble of a long abandoned project,” said Toro in an announcement, “Medley will rise from a sea of empty buildings to become the walkable, urban oasis the Johns Creek community deserves.”
In November, Medley secured $560 million in financing despite the headwinds of tough capital markets as U.S. banks remain on the sidelines, especially for retail-heavy ventures, per TDC officials. Phase one funding includes a $158 million construction loan from Mexico City-based Banco Inbursa and an equity investment from Denver-based real estate private equity firm Ascentris.
The Johns Creek City Council in October unanimously approved plans for a 175-key Medley hotel that TDC hopes will replicate the success of Avalon’s hospitality component.
Beyond the hotel, phase one is set to include roughly 180,000 square feet for retail, restaurant, and entertainment spaces, a 25,000-square-foot plaza, and 100,000 square feet of offices.
Residential plans call for 133 Empire Communities-built townhomes and 340 apartments in the initial phase.
Once that opens, TDC plans to host 200 events per year, ranging from live music and outdoor wellness classes to art festivals and watch parties, officials have said.
How the 175-key boutique hotel is expected to relate to a Medley greenspace and retail. Courtesy of Toro Development Company
In terms of food offerings, Medley’s phase one will include the first suburban locations of Fadó Irish Pub and Little Rey, a Mexican concept by chef and restaurateur Ford Fry. Other announced tenants include CRÚ Food & Wine Bar, 26 Thai Kitchen and Bar, Five Daughters Bakery, Summit Coffee, Lily Sushi Bar, Knuckies Hoagies, Cookie Fix, Sugarcoat Beauty, BODY20, and AYA Medical Spa, among other concepts.
All told, Medley is expected to create 900 residences considered luxury-grade (all townhomes and apartments), another 20,000 square feet of retail, and an Avalon-style central greenspace designed for community events and gatherings.
Should Johns Creek’s broader plans fully come to fruition, Medley will eventually be just one facet of the city’s 192-acre Town Center, a blend of housing, hotels, offices, lakes, and greenspace about the size of Piedmont Park.
Some aspects of that vision are under construction now.
“A Johns Creek town center was once considered little more than a dream,” Mayor John Bradberry said in this week’s announcement. “With Boston Scientific [life science facilities] almost complete, Creekside Park construction in full swing, and now the official launch of Medley as the premium mixed-use linchpin, our town center is quickly becoming a reality.”
…
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‘Walkable, urban oasis’ in northern ‘burbs officially starts construction
Josh Green
Wed, 01/15/2025 – 12:42
After two and ½ years of planning, demolition, and financing negotiations, Johns Creek’s long-held dream of building a city center is officially underway as of this week, according to city and development officials.
Atlanta-based Toro Development Company on Monday announced the groundbreaking—and set a firm grand-opening date—for the $560-million, 43-acre Medley district in the well-to-do north Fulton County city.
According to TDC officials, Medley marks one of the only mixed-use projects of such complexity and scale to break ground nationally this year, as a lending environment they described as “frigid” lingers.
Prior to this week’s groundbreaking, Medley has managed to sign leases with more than 25 brands, including the first OTP outposts for beloved intown food-and-beverage concepts. A 350,000-square-foot office building at the site previously occupied by State Farm Insurance Co. has also been razed, while a smaller, four-story office structure will be adaptively reused and woven into new streets and plazas.
According to TDC, Medley is now set to open on Oct. 29, 2026. It will claim a moribund site surrounded by (obviously) alluring demographics where Johns Creek Parkway meets McGinnis Ferry Road.
Projected look of Medley’s repurposed office building, next to a standalone restaurant and central plaza. Courtesy of Toro Development Company
Earlier overview of the Medley site’s two mid-rise office buildings formerly occupied by State Farm Insurance Co. The building at bottom is being incorporated into the new project; the other has been razed. Google Maps
TDC head Mark Toro said Medley’s broader goal is to create a “third place” from a “dead, suburban office park” where people can socialize and enjoy life outside of work and home.
“Similar to bringing Avalon to life from the rubble of a long abandoned project,” said Toro in an announcement, “Medley will rise from a sea of empty buildings to become the walkable, urban oasis the Johns Creek community deserves.”
In November, Medley secured $560 million in financing despite the headwinds of tough capital markets as U.S. banks remain on the sidelines, especially for retail-heavy ventures, per TDC officials. Phase one funding includes a $158 million construction loan from Mexico City-based Banco Inbursa and an equity investment from Denver-based real estate private equity firm Ascentris.
The Johns Creek City Council in October unanimously approved plans for a 175-key Medley hotel that TDC hopes will replicate the success of Avalon’s hospitality component.
Beyond the hotel, phase one is set to include roughly 180,000 square feet for retail, restaurant, and entertainment spaces, a 25,000-square-foot plaza, and 100,000 square feet of offices.
Residential plans call for 133 Empire Communities-built townhomes and 340 apartments in the initial phase.
Once that opens, TDC plans to host 200 events per year, ranging from live music and outdoor wellness classes to art festivals and watch parties, officials have said.
How the 175-key boutique hotel is expected to relate to a Medley greenspace and retail. Courtesy of Toro Development Company
Courtesy of Toro Development Company
In terms of food offerings, Medley’s phase one will include the first suburban locations of Fadó Irish Pub and Little Rey, a Mexican concept by chef and restaurateur Ford Fry. Other announced tenants include CRÚ Food & Wine Bar, 26 Thai Kitchen and Bar, Five Daughters Bakery, Summit Coffee, Lily Sushi Bar, Knuckies Hoagies, Cookie Fix, Sugarcoat Beauty, BODY20, and AYA Medical Spa, among other concepts.
All told, Medley is expected to create 900 residences considered luxury-grade (all townhomes and apartments), another 20,000 square feet of retail, and an Avalon-style central greenspace designed for community events and gatherings.
Should Johns Creek’s broader plans fully come to fruition, Medley will eventually be just one facet of the city’s 192-acre Town Center, a blend of housing, hotels, offices, lakes, and greenspace about the size of Piedmont Park.
Some aspects of that vision are under construction now.
“A Johns Creek town center was once considered little more than a dream,” Mayor John Bradberry said in this week’s announcement. “With Boston Scientific [life science facilities] almost complete, Creekside Park construction in full swing, and now the official launch of Medley as the premium mixed-use linchpin, our town center is quickly becoming a reality.”
…
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The Medley site’s location in Johns Creek, in relation to Atlanta’s north OTP cities. Google Maps
The 43-acre Medley will be the first new section of Johns Creek’s Town Center concept. Toro Development Company; designs, Nelson Worldwide
Projected look of Medley’s repurposed office building, next to a standalone restaurant and central plaza. Courtesy of Toro Development Company
How the 175-key boutique hotel is expected to relate to a Medley greenspace and retail. Courtesy of Toro Development Company
Courtesy of Toro Development Company
Courtesy of Toro Development Company
Part of the 43-acre property, as seen along Johns Creek Parkway, while still actively used by State Farm in 2017. Google Maps
Earlier overview of the Medley site’s two mid-rise office buildings formerly occupied by State Farm Insurance Co. The building at bottom is being incorporated into the new project; the other has been razed. Google Maps
Subtitle
43-acre Medley project aims to start opening at “dead” Johns Creek office park next year
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Johns Creek
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Medley
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‘Walkable, urban oasis’ in northern ‘burbs officially starts construction
Josh Green
Wed, 01/15/2025 – 12:42
After two and ½ years of planning, demolition, and financing negotiations, Johns Creek’s long-held dream of building a city center is officially underway as of this week, according to city and development officials.
Atlanta-based Toro Development Company on Monday announced the groundbreaking—and set a firm grand-opening date—for the $560-million, 43-acre Medley district in the well-to-do north Fulton County city.
According to TDC officials, Medley marks one of the only mixed-use projects of such complexity and scale to break ground nationally this year, as a lending environment they described as “frigid” lingers.
Prior to this week’s groundbreaking, Medley has managed to sign leases with more than 25 brands, including the first OTP outposts for beloved intown food-and-beverage concepts. A 350,000-square-foot office building at the site previously occupied by State Farm Insurance Co. has also been razed, while a smaller, four-story office structure will be adaptively reused and woven into new streets and plazas.
According to TDC, Medley is now set to open on Oct. 29, 2026. It will claim a moribund site surrounded by (obviously) alluring demographics where Johns Creek Parkway meets McGinnis Ferry Road.
Projected look of Medley’s repurposed office building, next to a standalone restaurant and central plaza. Courtesy of Toro Development Company
Earlier overview of the Medley site’s two mid-rise office buildings formerly occupied by State Farm Insurance Co. The building at bottom is being incorporated into the new project; the other has been razed. Google Maps
TDC head Mark Toro said Medley’s broader goal is to create a “third place” from a “dead, suburban office park” where people can socialize and enjoy life outside of work and home.
“Similar to bringing Avalon to life from the rubble of a long abandoned project,” said Toro in an announcement, “Medley will rise from a sea of empty buildings to become the walkable, urban oasis the Johns Creek community deserves.”
In November, Medley secured $560 million in financing despite the headwinds of tough capital markets as U.S. banks remain on the sidelines, especially for retail-heavy ventures, per TDC officials. Phase one funding includes a $158 million construction loan from Mexico City-based Banco Inbursa and an equity investment from Denver-based real estate private equity firm Ascentris.
The Johns Creek City Council in October unanimously approved plans for a 175-key Medley hotel that TDC hopes will replicate the success of Avalon’s hospitality component.
Beyond the hotel, phase one is set to include roughly 180,000 square feet for retail, restaurant, and entertainment spaces, a 25,000-square-foot plaza, and 100,000 square feet of offices.
Residential plans call for 133 Empire Communities-built townhomes and 340 apartments in the initial phase.
Once that opens, TDC plans to host 200 events per year, ranging from live music and outdoor wellness classes to art festivals and watch parties, officials have said.
How the 175-key boutique hotel is expected to relate to a Medley greenspace and retail. Courtesy of Toro Development Company
Courtesy of Toro Development Company
In terms of food offerings, Medley’s phase one will include the first suburban locations of Fadó Irish Pub and Little Rey, a Mexican concept by chef and restaurateur Ford Fry. Other announced tenants include CRÚ Food & Wine Bar, 26 Thai Kitchen and Bar, Five Daughters Bakery, Summit Coffee, Lily Sushi Bar, Knuckies Hoagies, Cookie Fix, Sugarcoat Beauty, BODY20, and AYA Medical Spa, among other concepts.
All told, Medley is expected to create 900 residences considered luxury-grade (all townhomes and apartments), another 20,000 square feet of retail, and an Avalon-style central greenspace designed for community events and gatherings.
Should Johns Creek’s broader plans fully come to fruition, Medley will eventually be just one facet of the city’s 192-acre Town Center, a blend of housing, hotels, offices, lakes, and greenspace about the size of Piedmont Park.
Some aspects of that vision are under construction now.
“A Johns Creek town center was once considered little more than a dream,” Mayor John Bradberry said in this week’s announcement. “With Boston Scientific [life science facilities] almost complete, Creekside Park construction in full swing, and now the official launch of Medley as the premium mixed-use linchpin, our town center is quickly becoming a reality.”
…
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Twitter / Facebook/and now: Instagram
• Johns Creek news, discussion (Urbanize Atlanta)
Tags
11650 Johns Creek Parkway
Medley
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Ascentris
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Images
The Medley site’s location in Johns Creek, in relation to Atlanta’s north OTP cities. Google Maps
The 43-acre Medley will be the first new section of Johns Creek’s Town Center concept. Toro Development Company; designs, Nelson Worldwide
Projected look of Medley’s repurposed office building, next to a standalone restaurant and central plaza. Courtesy of Toro Development Company
How the 175-key boutique hotel is expected to relate to a Medley greenspace and retail. Courtesy of Toro Development Company
Courtesy of Toro Development Company
Courtesy of Toro Development Company
Part of the 43-acre property, as seen along Johns Creek Parkway, while still actively used by State Farm in 2017. Google Maps
Earlier overview of the Medley site’s two mid-rise office buildings formerly occupied by State Farm Insurance Co. The building at bottom is being incorporated into the new project; the other has been razed. Google Maps
Subtitle
43-acre Medley project aims to start opening at “dead” Johns Creek office park next year
Neighborhood
Johns Creek
Background Image
Image
Associated Project
Medley
Before/After Images
Sponsored Post
Off
Warehouse Developer Buys 66 Acres near NE Georgia Inland Port
Warehouse Developer Buys 66 Acres near NE Georgia Inland Port
Alliance Industrial Company purchased 66.75 acres of land near the Northeast Georgia Inland Port in Gainesville, Georgia. The company will develop two speculative industrial buildings totaling 540,408 square feet. Building 100 will be 113,536 square feet and Building 200 will be 426,872 square feet. The park will be named Alliance 985 Business Park.
Avison Young’s Chris Hoag, Jason Holland, and Andrew Joyner arranged the transaction on behalf of Alliance and have been tapped to handle leasing. Stephen Lovett and Zach Tibbs of Norton Commercial represented one of the four parcels of land.
Alliance will break ground on the project in Q1 2025 and is slated to deliver in early 2026. With immediate access to I-985 and within 15 miles of I-85, the park offers excellent connectivity to local, regional, and national distribution channels. Tenants will benefit from proximity to key logistics hubs such as UPS and FedEx.
The post Warehouse Developer Buys 66 Acres near NE Georgia Inland Port appeared first on Connect CRE.
Alliance Industrial Company purchased 66.75 acres of land near the Northeast Georgia Inland Port in Gainesville, Georgia. The company will develop two speculative industrial buildings totaling 540,408 square feet. Building 100 will be 113,536 square feet and Building 200 will be 426,872 square feet. The park will be named Alliance 985 Business Park. Avison Young’s …
The post Warehouse Developer Buys 66 Acres near NE Georgia Inland Port appeared first on Connect CRE. Read MoreAtlanta & Southeast Commercial Real Estate News
Alliance Industrial Company purchased 66.75 acres of land near the Northeast Georgia Inland Port in Gainesville, Georgia. The company will develop two speculative industrial buildings totaling 540,408 square feet. Building 100 will be 113,536 square feet and Building 200 will be 426,872 square feet. The park will be named Alliance 985 Business Park. Avison Young’s …
The post Warehouse Developer Buys 66 Acres near NE Georgia Inland Port appeared first on Connect CRE.
Mall West End to Close, Owners Reveal Renovations Plans
Mall West End to Close, Owners Reveal Renovations Plans
BRP Companies and The Prusik Group have updated their plans for the Mall West End property after it shuts down. With the mall set to officially close at the end of January, the development team has been working with legacy tenants to ensure that the uniqueness of the West End is preserved and upheld throughout the transformation.
During construction, several long-standing mall tenants will be relocated to a temporary on-site space at 850 Oak Street.
Once complete, One West End will feature 125,000 square feet of retail, including a grocery store, fitness center, diverse dining options, and local boutiques. The residential component will feature approximately 900 mixed-income residences, a mix of studio to three-bedroom units, with affordable units available to those earning between 50% and 80% of the area median income (AMI). Additionally, the development includes student housing, a planned 150-key hotel, and 12,000 square feet of medical office space.
Phase One of the redevelopment is expected to be completed in 2028.
The post Mall West End to Close, Owners Reveal Renovations Plans appeared first on Connect CRE.
BRP Companies and The Prusik Group have updated their plans for the Mall West End property after it shuts down. With the mall set to officially close at the end of January, the development team has been working with legacy tenants to ensure that the uniqueness of the West End is preserved and upheld throughout …
The post Mall West End to Close, Owners Reveal Renovations Plans appeared first on Connect CRE. Read MoreAtlanta Commercial Real Estate News
BRP Companies and The Prusik Group have updated their plans for the Mall West End property after it shuts down. With the mall set to officially close at the end of January, the development team has been working with legacy tenants to ensure that the uniqueness of the West End is preserved and upheld throughout …
The post Mall West End to Close, Owners Reveal Renovations Plans appeared first on Connect CRE.
Images: Wedge-shaped build near Atlantic Station readies for closeup
Images: Wedge-shaped build near Atlantic Station readies for closeup
Images: Wedge-shaped build near Atlantic Station readies for closeup
Josh Green
Tue, 01/14/2025 – 14:45
In the shadow of Atlantic Station, a wedge-shaped apartment venture several years in the making has begun leasing efforts where other developments failed to take off.
The infill project by Charleston-based Middle Street Partners—now officially christened “Westside Union”—has taken shape on a previously vacant, 1.4-acre site just north of Atlantic Station’s Target in the Loring Heights neighborhood.
With its unique flatiron design, the 400 Bishop St. development stands 11 stories on land formerly zoned for heavy industrial uses, next to active Norfolk Southern railroad lines.
The project started construction in September 2022 and will deliver 274 units, ranging from one to three-bedroom apartments, according to Middle Street.
Westside Union’s 400 Bishop St. location in relation to Atlantic Station (across active railroad tracks), the Connector freeway, and residential Loring Heights. Google Maps
Westside Union’s unique shape and stance along Bishop Street in Loring Heights.Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Several outdoor amenities areas extend from Westside Union’s north and east faces, and units along Bishop Street at ground level will function as live-work properties, according to plans approved by the city in 2021.
Westside Union amenities are listed as coworking space, a two-story gym, a club room with a gaming area, and a resort-style pool, among other perks. Skyline views from the rooftop amenity spaces, meanwhile, span across Midtown to downtown and around toward Buckhead.
Current rents at Westside Union start at $1,675. That gets a studio (with relatively private sleeping quarters) in 535 square feet.
On the flipside, the largest and priciest rental option currently listed is a three-bedroom, three-bathroom space in 1,709 square feet. That’s going for $3,895 monthly.
Two months of free rent is being dangled as an incentive.
Westside Union’s “Rooftop SkyLounge,” with south views across Atlantic Station to downtown. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Elsewhere in Atlanta, Middle Street’s debut project in the city is a mixed-use apartment venture fronting the Beltline’s Southside Trail corridor in Grant Park, where a Mellow Mushroom prototype opened last month.
The company is also building two Midtown towers—topped out at 37 and 34 stories, respectively, in a single project—on the former site of longstanding establishments Einstein’s and Joe’s On Juniper. Apartments on Juniper Street are scheduled to start delivering early this year, officials have said.
Other ideas hatched for the 400 Bishop St. site failed to move forward. (Ditto for a pedestrian bridge that would have been built over the adjacent railroad tracks for quicker access between Loring Heights and Atlantic Station.)
Plans that emerged in 2019 by another development group, Track West Partners, called for 130,000 square feet of creative offices above retail in a shorter building.
Other concepts have called for just 26,000 square feet of offices in four stories, with a “post-COVID-era wellness plan” and emphasis on city views.
Swing up to the gallery for more Westside Union context and renderings as the building enters the homestretch of construction.
…
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• Atlantic Station news, discussion (Urbanize Atlanta)

Images: Wedge-shaped build near Atlantic Station readies for closeup
Josh Green
Tue, 01/14/2025 – 14:45
In the shadow of Atlantic Station, a wedge-shaped apartment venture several years in the making has begun leasing efforts where other developments failed to take off.
The infill project by Charleston-based Middle Street Partners—now officially christened “Westside Union”—has taken shape on a previously vacant, 1.4-acre site just north of Atlantic Station’s Target in the Loring Heights neighborhood.
With its unique flatiron design, the 400 Bishop St. development stands 11 stories on land formerly zoned for heavy industrial uses, next to active Norfolk Southern railroad lines.
The project started construction in September 2022 and will deliver 274 units, ranging from one to three-bedroom apartments, according to Middle Street.
Westside Union’s 400 Bishop St. location in relation to Atlantic Station (across active railroad tracks), the Connector freeway, and residential Loring Heights. Google Maps
Westside Union’s unique shape and stance along Bishop Street in Loring Heights.Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Several outdoor amenities areas extend from Westside Union’s north and east faces, and units along Bishop Street at ground level will function as live-work properties, according to plans approved by the city in 2021.
Westside Union amenities are listed as coworking space, a two-story gym, a club room with a gaming area, and a resort-style pool, among other perks. Skyline views from the rooftop amenity spaces, meanwhile, span across Midtown to downtown and around toward Buckhead.
Current rents at Westside Union start at $1,675. That gets a studio (with relatively private sleeping quarters) in 535 square feet.
On the flipside, the largest and priciest rental option currently listed is a three-bedroom, three-bathroom space in 1,709 square feet. That’s going for $3,895 monthly.
Two months of free rent is being dangled as an incentive.
Designs for the Westside Union club room and gaming area. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Westside Union’s “Rooftop SkyLounge,” with south views across Atlantic Station to downtown. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Elsewhere in Atlanta, Middle Street’s debut project in the city is a mixed-use apartment venture fronting the Beltline’s Southside Trail corridor in Grant Park, where a Mellow Mushroom prototype opened last month.
The company is also building two Midtown towers—topped out at 37 and 34 stories, respectively, in a single project—on the former site of longstanding establishments Einstein’s and Joe’s On Juniper. Apartments on Juniper Street are scheduled to start delivering early this year, officials have said.
Other ideas hatched for the 400 Bishop St. site failed to move forward. (Ditto for a pedestrian bridge that would have been built over the adjacent railroad tracks for quicker access between Loring Heights and Atlantic Station.)
Plans that emerged in 2019 by another development group, Track West Partners, called for 130,000 square feet of creative offices above retail in a shorter building.
Other concepts have called for just 26,000 square feet of offices in four stories, with a “post-COVID-era wellness plan” and emphasis on city views.
The largest, three-bedroom rental option currently offered. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Communal lounging space at the Loring Heights project. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Swing up to the gallery for more Westside Union context and renderings as the building enters the homestretch of construction.
…
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• Atlantic Station news, discussion (Urbanize Atlanta)
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Westside Union’s 400 Bishop St. location in relation to Atlantic Station (across active railroad tracks), the Connector freeway, and residential Loring Heights. Google Maps
Westside Union’s unique shape and stance along Bishop Street in Loring Heights.Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
The Westside Union lobby. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Communal lounging space at the Loring Heights project. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Westside Union’s two-story fitness center. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Westside Union’s “Rooftop SkyLounge,” with south views across Atlantic Station to downtown. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Designs for the Westside Union club room and gaming area. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Outdoor dining area. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Example of kitchen designs at Westside Union. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
In-unit perks are listed as quartz countertops, “luxe wood-plank flooring,” keyless entry, full-size washers and dryers, and some units with private balconies and skyline views. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Example of bedroom design. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
The least expensive studio floorplan (536 square feet) at Westside Union. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
The largest, three-bedroom rental option currently offered. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Construction progress on the wedge-shaped easternmost point of Westside Union in February last year. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta
Subtitle
Loring Heights infill apartments officially christened “Westside Union”
Neighborhood
Loring Heights
Background Image
Image
Associated Project
400 Bishop Street NW
Before/After Images
Sponsored Post
Off Read More
Images: Wedge-shaped build near Atlantic Station readies for closeup
Josh Green
Tue, 01/14/2025 – 14:45
In the shadow of Atlantic Station, a wedge-shaped apartment venture several years in the making has begun leasing efforts where other developments failed to take off.
The infill project by Charleston-based Middle Street Partners—now officially christened “Westside Union”—has taken shape on a previously vacant, 1.4-acre site just north of Atlantic Station’s Target in the Loring Heights neighborhood.
With its unique flatiron design, the 400 Bishop St. development stands 11 stories on land formerly zoned for heavy industrial uses, next to active Norfolk Southern railroad lines.
The project started construction in September 2022 and will deliver 274 units, ranging from one to three-bedroom apartments, according to Middle Street.
Westside Union’s 400 Bishop St. location in relation to Atlantic Station (across active railroad tracks), the Connector freeway, and residential Loring Heights. Google Maps
Westside Union’s unique shape and stance along Bishop Street in Loring Heights.Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Several outdoor amenities areas extend from Westside Union’s north and east faces, and units along Bishop Street at ground level will function as live-work properties, according to plans approved by the city in 2021.
Westside Union amenities are listed as coworking space, a two-story gym, a club room with a gaming area, and a resort-style pool, among other perks. Skyline views from the rooftop amenity spaces, meanwhile, span across Midtown to downtown and around toward Buckhead.
Current rents at Westside Union start at $1,675. That gets a studio (with relatively private sleeping quarters) in 535 square feet.
On the flipside, the largest and priciest rental option currently listed is a three-bedroom, three-bathroom space in 1,709 square feet. That’s going for $3,895 monthly.
Two months of free rent is being dangled as an incentive.
Designs for the Westside Union club room and gaming area. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Westside Union’s “Rooftop SkyLounge,” with south views across Atlantic Station to downtown. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Elsewhere in Atlanta, Middle Street’s debut project in the city is a mixed-use apartment venture fronting the Beltline’s Southside Trail corridor in Grant Park, where a Mellow Mushroom prototype opened last month.
The company is also building two Midtown towers—topped out at 37 and 34 stories, respectively, in a single project—on the former site of longstanding establishments Einstein’s and Joe’s On Juniper. Apartments on Juniper Street are scheduled to start delivering early this year, officials have said.
Other ideas hatched for the 400 Bishop St. site failed to move forward. (Ditto for a pedestrian bridge that would have been built over the adjacent railroad tracks for quicker access between Loring Heights and Atlantic Station.)
Plans that emerged in 2019 by another development group, Track West Partners, called for 130,000 square feet of creative offices above retail in a shorter building.
Other concepts have called for just 26,000 square feet of offices in four stories, with a “post-COVID-era wellness plan” and emphasis on city views.
The largest, three-bedroom rental option currently offered. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Communal lounging space at the Loring Heights project. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Swing up to the gallery for more Westside Union context and renderings as the building enters the homestretch of construction.
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Tags
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Images
Westside Union’s 400 Bishop St. location in relation to Atlantic Station (across active railroad tracks), the Connector freeway, and residential Loring Heights. Google Maps
Westside Union’s unique shape and stance along Bishop Street in Loring Heights.Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
The Westside Union lobby. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Communal lounging space at the Loring Heights project. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Westside Union’s two-story fitness center. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Westside Union’s “Rooftop SkyLounge,” with south views across Atlantic Station to downtown. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Designs for the Westside Union club room and gaming area. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Outdoor dining area. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Example of kitchen designs at Westside Union. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
In-unit perks are listed as quartz countertops, “luxe wood-plank flooring,” keyless entry, full-size washers and dryers, and some units with private balconies and skyline views. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Example of bedroom design. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
The least expensive studio floorplan (536 square feet) at Westside Union. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
The largest, three-bedroom rental option currently offered. Westside Union/Middle Street Partners
Construction progress on the wedge-shaped easternmost point of Westside Union in February last year. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta
Subtitle
Loring Heights infill apartments officially christened “Westside Union”
Neighborhood
Loring Heights
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Image
Associated Project
400 Bishop Street NW
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Sponsored Post
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Atlanta officials seek help in filling former 44-acre park with housing
Atlanta officials seek help in filling former 44-acre park with housing
Gun Club Park could be turned into a sprawling development with detached single-family homes, townhomes and small apartment buildings.
Gun Club Park could be turned into a sprawling development with detached single-family homes, townhomes and small apartment buildings. Read MoreBizjournals.com Feed (2019-09-06 17:16:48)
Gun Club Park could be turned into a sprawling development with detached single-family homes, townhomes and small apartment buildings.
Atlanta officials seek help in filling former 44-acre park with housing
Atlanta officials seek help in filling former 44-acre park with housing
Gun Club Park could be turned into a sprawling development with detached single-family homes, townhomes and small apartment buildings.
Gun Club Park could be turned into a sprawling development with detached single-family homes, townhomes and small apartment buildings. Read MoreBizjournals.com Feed (2022-04-02 21:43:57)
Gun Club Park could be turned into a sprawling development with detached single-family homes, townhomes and small apartment buildings.
7 months after tenant pick, it’s still crickets at Grant Park Gateway
7 months after tenant pick, it’s still crickets at Grant Park Gateway
7 months after tenant pick, it’s still crickets at Grant Park Gateway
Josh Green
Tue, 01/14/2025 – 13:09
This month marks four years since a Grant Park project described as “iconic” by city officials debuted, but still its modern jewel box of a retail and restaurant space remains oddly empty.
According to concerned neighbors, that shows no signs of changing soon.
Back in June, the City of Atlanta’s Departments of Procurement and Parks and Recreation selected Savi Provisions, a local gourmet market and grocery chain known for its wine selection and organic foods, to fill the entire, 7,000-square-foot Grant Park Gateway retail space. The distinctive building overlooks a new 2.5-acre park atop a parking garage next to Zoo Atlanta.
That selection process was competitive, and it called for Savi to open in roughly 180 days, or sometime around December last year.
Seven months later, the space remains vacant, with no signs of work starting soon.
Where Savi’s Gateway project stands—or if it’s still viable—isn’t clear. Inquiries this month to City of Atlanta press officials and to City Council member Jason Winston’s office haven’t been returned. Winston’s District 1 covers Grant Park, and he helped lead the Gateway tenant selection process.
Multiple inquiries to Savi leadership have not been returned. Savi’s website makes no mention of a forthcoming Grant Park location.
Perhaps more troubling for neighbors eager for fresh grocery and market options is that building permit records show no activity related to Savi’s buildout at the Gateway building.
The city’s Department of Procurement still lists the Grant Park Gateway tenant solicitation process as having been closed since April.
Aerial of the Gateway illustrating its proximity to the zoo’s elephant habitat and downtown. City of Atlanta Parks and Recreation Department; via Epsten Group
Founded in 2009, Savi counts locations in North Carolina and 16 stores in metro Atlanta, spanning from the airport to Howell Mill Road, Decatur, and Brookhaven to the Crabapple district in Milton.
The nearest Savi outpost to Grant Park remains the original one in Inman Park, roughly two and ½ miles away.
Savi, one of three finalists vying for the Gateway space, is expected to “boost the area’s diversity of food options and convenience, acting as a central gathering place for both residents and visitors,” read a June announcement from Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens’ office, following Savi’s selection.
The $48-million Gateway project replaced a parking lot with the park-topped garage, officially opening in January 2021. The following year, it earned the Atlanta Urban Design Commission’s Award of Excellence for sustainable design, but the process of filling the cavernous retail component has not been a walk in the park.
The spacious interior of the Gateway building, as seen in early 2021, looks largely the same today. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta
City officials took ownership of the Gateway space from the Atlanta and Fulton County Recreation Authority two years after it had opened—a key first step in getting it leased and occupied, per city officials.
But the city’s first Request for Proposals issued in February 2023 didn’t attract a single bid from prospective tenants.
The city’s Department of Procurement, charged with helping lead the tenant search, concluded that rising construction costs spurred by inflation, combined with increased interest rates, contributed to the initial lack of bids.
The city later partnered with Invest Atlanta to offer an unspecified amount of financial assistance to the right operator.
Issued in February, the second stab at an RFP was an improved pitch to businesses that could fill such a large space. It provided drone footage, set up tours for potential tenants, and specified how large the shell space is: 7,056 square feet. It called for a single enterprise to create a Gateway concept that would “increase the property value of the neighborhood, improve the area’s livability, serve as a convenience to neighborhood residents and visitors, and continue Atlanta’s forward progress.”
Another finalist for the retail space was a concept called “Gateway Park and Market.”
That idea was put together by a team that included Terminus Commercial Real Estate Partners, an Atlanta-based CRE firm, alongside Kraig Torres, owner of alcohol purveyor Hopcity, and Mike Walbert, a longtime Atlanta event curator. It called for a micro food hall “foodie destination” and “cultural experience” that would have leaned heavily into public programming and capitalized on proximity to Zoo Atlanta, as its creators told Urbanize Atlanta last year.
The third finalist was Rease Group Holdings Inc., an Atlanta-based company led by CEO Andy Rease and founded in 2010.
Find more context—and a refresher on what the Grant Park Gateway is today—in the gallery above.
…
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• Grant Park news, discussion (Urbanize Atlanta)

7 months after tenant pick, it’s still crickets at Grant Park Gateway
Josh Green
Tue, 01/14/2025 – 13:09
This month marks four years since a Grant Park project described as “iconic” by city officials debuted, but still its modern jewel box of a retail and restaurant space remains oddly empty.
According to concerned neighbors, that shows no signs of changing soon.
Back in June, the City of Atlanta’s Departments of Procurement and Parks and Recreation selected Savi Provisions, a local gourmet market and grocery chain known for its wine selection and organic foods, to fill the entire, 7,000-square-foot Grant Park Gateway retail space. The distinctive building overlooks a new 2.5-acre park atop a parking garage next to Zoo Atlanta.
That selection process was competitive, and it called for Savi to open in roughly 180 days, or sometime around December last year.
Seven months later, the space remains vacant, with no signs of work starting soon.
The distinctive Grant Park Gateway building in 2021. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta
Where Savi’s Gateway project stands—or if it’s still viable—isn’t clear. Inquiries this month to City of Atlanta press officials and to City Council member Jason Winston’s office haven’t been returned. Winston’s District 1 covers Grant Park, and he helped lead the Gateway tenant selection process.
Multiple inquiries to Savi leadership have not been returned. Savi’s website makes no mention of a forthcoming Grant Park location.
Perhaps more troubling for neighbors eager for fresh grocery and market options is that building permit records show no activity related to Savi’s buildout at the Gateway building.
The city’s Department of Procurement still lists the Grant Park Gateway tenant solicitation process as having been closed since April.
Aerial of the Gateway illustrating its proximity to the zoo’s elephant habitat and downtown. City of Atlanta Parks and Recreation Department; via Epsten Group
Founded in 2009, Savi counts locations in North Carolina and 16 stores in metro Atlanta, spanning from the airport to Howell Mill Road, Decatur, and Brookhaven to the Crabapple district in Milton.
The nearest Savi outpost to Grant Park remains the original one in Inman Park, roughly two and ½ miles away.
Savi, one of three finalists vying for the Gateway space, is expected to “boost the area’s diversity of food options and convenience, acting as a central gathering place for both residents and visitors,” read a June announcement from Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens’ office, following Savi’s selection.
The $48-million Gateway project replaced a parking lot with the park-topped garage, officially opening in January 2021. The following year, it earned the Atlanta Urban Design Commission’s Award of Excellence for sustainable design, but the process of filling the cavernous retail component has not been a walk in the park.
The spacious interior of the Gateway building, as seen in early 2021, looks largely the same today. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta
City officials took ownership of the Gateway space from the Atlanta and Fulton County Recreation Authority two years after it had opened—a key first step in getting it leased and occupied, per city officials.
But the city’s first Request for Proposals issued in February 2023 didn’t attract a single bid from prospective tenants.
The city’s Department of Procurement, charged with helping lead the tenant search, concluded that rising construction costs spurred by inflation, combined with increased interest rates, contributed to the initial lack of bids.
The city later partnered with Invest Atlanta to offer an unspecified amount of financial assistance to the right operator.
Issued in February, the second stab at an RFP was an improved pitch to businesses that could fill such a large space. It provided drone footage, set up tours for potential tenants, and specified how large the shell space is: 7,056 square feet. It called for a single enterprise to create a Gateway concept that would “increase the property value of the neighborhood, improve the area’s livability, serve as a convenience to neighborhood residents and visitors, and continue Atlanta’s forward progress.”
The 2.5-acre park space in relation to the restaurant structure. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta
Another finalist for the retail space was a concept called “Gateway Park and Market.”
That idea was put together by a team that included Terminus Commercial Real Estate Partners, an Atlanta-based CRE firm, alongside Kraig Torres, owner of alcohol purveyor Hopcity, and Mike Walbert, a longtime Atlanta event curator. It called for a micro food hall “foodie destination” and “cultural experience” that would have leaned heavily into public programming and capitalized on proximity to Zoo Atlanta, as its creators told Urbanize Atlanta last year.
The third finalist was Rease Group Holdings Inc., an Atlanta-based company led by CEO Andy Rease and founded in 2010.
Find more context—and a refresher on what the Grant Park Gateway is today—in the gallery above.
…
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• Grant Park news, discussion (Urbanize Atlanta)
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Savi Provision
Terminus Commercial Real Estate Partners
The Rease Group Holdings
Mike Walbert
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Images
The distinctive Grant Park Gateway building in 2021. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta
The spacious interior of the Gateway building, as seen in early 2021, looks largely the same today. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta
The underside of the patio’s roof comes to life with lighting at night. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta
Where the south facade of the restaurant building meets stacked parking. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta
Aerial of the Gateway illustrating its proximity to the zoo’s elephant habitat and downtown. City of Atlanta Parks and Recreation Department; via Epsten Group
Screenshot from drone footage distributed by the City of Atlanta to promote the Grant Park Greenway space. City of Atlanta
The patio area has become a popular destination for roller skaters. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta
The patio/pavilion area, looking west to Zoo Atlanta. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta
Screenshot from drone footage distributed by the City of Atlanta to promote the Grant Park Gateway space. City of Atlanta
Subtitle
Market and grocer Savi Provisions was supposed to be gearing up for opening now. What gives?
Neighborhood
Grant Park
Background Image
Image
Associated Project
Grant Park Gateway
Before/After Images
Sponsored Post
Off Read More
7 months after tenant pick, it’s still crickets at Grant Park Gateway
Josh Green
Tue, 01/14/2025 – 13:09
This month marks four years since a Grant Park project described as “iconic” by city officials debuted, but still its modern jewel box of a retail and restaurant space remains oddly empty.
According to concerned neighbors, that shows no signs of changing soon.
Back in June, the City of Atlanta’s Departments of Procurement and Parks and Recreation selected Savi Provisions, a local gourmet market and grocery chain known for its wine selection and organic foods, to fill the entire, 7,000-square-foot Grant Park Gateway retail space. The distinctive building overlooks a new 2.5-acre park atop a parking garage next to Zoo Atlanta.
That selection process was competitive, and it called for Savi to open in roughly 180 days, or sometime around December last year.
Seven months later, the space remains vacant, with no signs of work starting soon.
The distinctive Grant Park Gateway building in 2021. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta
Where Savi’s Gateway project stands—or if it’s still viable—isn’t clear. Inquiries this month to City of Atlanta press officials and to City Council member Jason Winston’s office haven’t been returned. Winston’s District 1 covers Grant Park, and he helped lead the Gateway tenant selection process.
Multiple inquiries to Savi leadership have not been returned. Savi’s website makes no mention of a forthcoming Grant Park location.
Perhaps more troubling for neighbors eager for fresh grocery and market options is that building permit records show no activity related to Savi’s buildout at the Gateway building.
The city’s Department of Procurement still lists the Grant Park Gateway tenant solicitation process as having been closed since April.
Aerial of the Gateway illustrating its proximity to the zoo’s elephant habitat and downtown. City of Atlanta Parks and Recreation Department; via Epsten Group
Founded in 2009, Savi counts locations in North Carolina and 16 stores in metro Atlanta, spanning from the airport to Howell Mill Road, Decatur, and Brookhaven to the Crabapple district in Milton.
The nearest Savi outpost to Grant Park remains the original one in Inman Park, roughly two and ½ miles away.
Savi, one of three finalists vying for the Gateway space, is expected to “boost the area’s diversity of food options and convenience, acting as a central gathering place for both residents and visitors,” read a June announcement from Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens’ office, following Savi’s selection.
The $48-million Gateway project replaced a parking lot with the park-topped garage, officially opening in January 2021. The following year, it earned the Atlanta Urban Design Commission’s Award of Excellence for sustainable design, but the process of filling the cavernous retail component has not been a walk in the park.
The spacious interior of the Gateway building, as seen in early 2021, looks largely the same today. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta
City officials took ownership of the Gateway space from the Atlanta and Fulton County Recreation Authority two years after it had opened—a key first step in getting it leased and occupied, per city officials.
But the city’s first Request for Proposals issued in February 2023 didn’t attract a single bid from prospective tenants.
The city’s Department of Procurement, charged with helping lead the tenant search, concluded that rising construction costs spurred by inflation, combined with increased interest rates, contributed to the initial lack of bids.
The city later partnered with Invest Atlanta to offer an unspecified amount of financial assistance to the right operator.
Issued in February, the second stab at an RFP was an improved pitch to businesses that could fill such a large space. It provided drone footage, set up tours for potential tenants, and specified how large the shell space is: 7,056 square feet. It called for a single enterprise to create a Gateway concept that would “increase the property value of the neighborhood, improve the area’s livability, serve as a convenience to neighborhood residents and visitors, and continue Atlanta’s forward progress.”
The 2.5-acre park space in relation to the restaurant structure. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta
Another finalist for the retail space was a concept called “Gateway Park and Market.”
That idea was put together by a team that included Terminus Commercial Real Estate Partners, an Atlanta-based CRE firm, alongside Kraig Torres, owner of alcohol purveyor Hopcity, and Mike Walbert, a longtime Atlanta event curator. It called for a micro food hall “foodie destination” and “cultural experience” that would have leaned heavily into public programming and capitalized on proximity to Zoo Atlanta, as its creators told Urbanize Atlanta last year.
The third finalist was Rease Group Holdings Inc., an Atlanta-based company led by CEO Andy Rease and founded in 2010.
Find more context—and a refresher on what the Grant Park Gateway is today—in the gallery above.
…
Follow us on social media:
Twitter / Facebook/and now: Instagram
• Grant Park news, discussion (Urbanize Atlanta)
Tags
759 Boulevard SE
537 Park Avenue SE
Zoo Atlanta
Atlanta Parks
Grant Park
Grant Park Gateway
Parks and Recreation
HGOR
Smith Dalia Architects
Epsten Group
Winter Johnson Group
Boulevard
Jason Winston
Savi Provision
Terminus Commercial Real Estate Partners
The Rease Group Holdings
Mike Walbert
Kraig Torres
Hopcity
Gateway Park & Market
Images
The distinctive Grant Park Gateway building in 2021. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta
The spacious interior of the Gateway building, as seen in early 2021, looks largely the same today. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta
The underside of the patio’s roof comes to life with lighting at night. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta
Where the south facade of the restaurant building meets stacked parking. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta
Aerial of the Gateway illustrating its proximity to the zoo’s elephant habitat and downtown. City of Atlanta Parks and Recreation Department; via Epsten Group
Screenshot from drone footage distributed by the City of Atlanta to promote the Grant Park Greenway space. City of Atlanta
The patio area has become a popular destination for roller skaters. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta
The patio/pavilion area, looking west to Zoo Atlanta. Josh Green/Urbanize Atlanta
Screenshot from drone footage distributed by the City of Atlanta to promote the Grant Park Gateway space. City of Atlanta
Subtitle
Market and grocer Savi Provisions was supposed to be gearing up for opening now. What gives?
Neighborhood
Grant Park
Background Image
Image
Associated Project
Grant Park Gateway
Before/After Images
Sponsored Post
Off
CBRE to acquire Industrious in $800M deal
CBRE to acquire Industrious in $800M deal
Dallas-based commercial real estate firm CBRE Group Inc. said Tuesday it will acquire New York-based coworking company Industrious National Management Company LLC.
Dallas-based commercial real estate firm CBRE Group Inc. said Tuesday it will acquire New York-based coworking company Industrious National Management Company LLC. Read MoreBizjournals.com Feed (2019-09-06 17:16:48)
Dallas-based commercial real estate firm CBRE Group Inc. said Tuesday it will acquire New York-based coworking company Industrious National Management Company LLC.