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The $5 million raised is a milestone toward the overall goal of $6.5 million. These funds will allow the nonprofit to expand from its current 2,480-square-foot shelter into a 8,200-square-foot modern shelter.
A downtown Natick firm, which uses technology to help firms improve their employee benefits and HR compliance, has purchased the site of its headquarters for $5.3 million.
A developer behind a proposal to demolish a Clinton warehouse and replace it with three retail buildings and a gas station has bought the site for $1.45 million.
Dell still has a presence in Hopkinton, owning three properties which feature about 1.28 million square feet of office space. However, since the 2015 merger announcement, the company has off-loaded more than 1.2 million square feet.
In Central Massachusetts, the confidence banking executives have in the brick-and-mortar model is unwavering.
The development firm behind a 845,000-square-foot UPS distribution center has bought the property for $25 million.
Gov. Maura Healey said Thursday her administration will continue to withhold state funding from cities and towns that fail to comply with a controversial -- but constitutional -- zoning reform law, describing the latest challenges to the measure as
WuXi has disputed an early WBJ report saying construction at the Worcester site has stopped, although the company declined to provide specifics or give an updated timeline.
Property owners impacted by the federal government’s sudden termination of seven Central Massachusetts leases for facilities used by federal agencies likely have few options for recourse, according to a local real estate attorney.
“We’ve been DOGE-ed,” said Christopher Egan, president of Carruth Capital in Westborough, which owns one of the impacted properties.
A Worcester property, the site of a proposed daycare center and office space, has been sold for $1.4 million.
The former site of a Auburn seafood restaurant, which operated for more than six decades, has been purchased for $2.9 million,
ASA Controls was founded in 2003 and has developed a reputation for optimizing functionality and operational efficiency of buildings.
Burlington, the New Jersey-based discount department store chain formerly known as Burlington Coat Factory, is opening a location in Milford this summer.
Now in its third generation of family ownership, Whitinsville-based Koopman Lumber has expanded from a single retail hardware store to a network of a dozen locations spread across Massachusetts.
With the induction of the Class of 2025, the WBJ Hall of Fame has grown to 31 honorees.