News

  • No place like home

    No place like home

    Multifamily market attracts robust investment Strong investor interest and consumer demand is producing a rich variety of multifamily spaces in Maryland, from the Marlow in Columbia to a rooftop terrace at 1111 Light Street, a pool at Padonia Village and a pool room at the…

  • Maryland companies seek out opportunities in other states

    Maryland companies seek out opportunities in other states

    With demand for light industrial and distribution space continuing to experience strong growth, some Maryland CRE companies are expanding to other states to serve client needs and seize market opportunities. Even in a good economy, however, expanding into a new market is a major and potentially risky business operation. How…

  • Industry Roundtable: The Workplace

    Industry Roundtable: The Workplace

    Employees continue to slowly migrate back into traditional workplace settings, but the process has been slow and tedious for companies to effectively communicate, if not demonstrate, why the workplace provides an environment for heightened productivity, career advancement and acceptable safety. During his State of the Union address, President Biden declared…

  • Legal ramifications drive return-to-work decisions

    Legal ramifications drive return-to-work decisions

    President Joe Biden recently implored all Americans to “get back to work,” but many companies are still treading lightly and moving at a cautious pace due to possible liability issues with tenants and employees. The challenges being faced, together with the strategies being used to navigate this rapidly changing situation,…

  • COPT employs high-flying plan to complete renovation

    COPT employs high-flying plan to complete renovation

    It was a 30-minute construction operation that took an entire year to plan. Corporate Office Properties Trust (COPT) had embarked on a routine mechanical upgrade — replacing an office building chiller plant that was nearing the end of its lifecycle. The hitch was the office building was 100 Light Street…

  • Senate committee extends timeline for building decarbonization, orders studies of barriers and rate impacts

    Senate committee extends timeline for building decarbonization, orders studies of barriers and rate impacts

    A Maryland Senate committee has approved a scaled-back version of Senate Bill 528 that extends the first deadline in the timeline for decarbonization of existing buildings to 2035 and removes the requirement for all-electric new construction beginning in 2024. The Senate bill also requires three studies to advise the…

  • Senate bill would rapidly end fossil-fuel use in buildings

    Senate bill would rapidly end fossil-fuel use in buildings

    The Maryland Senate is moving legislation that mandates an abrupt end to fossil fuel use on a schedule that will present immense financial and logistical challenges for owners and occupants of commercial, industrial and multifamily real estate. NAIOP has consistently advocated for technically sound, cost-effective and orderly climate mitigation policies.

  • CRE grew in 2021 despite office sector woes

    CRE grew in 2021 despite office sector woes

    Despite all the economic turmoil in 2021, the commercial real estate sector grew and continued to be a major driver of the American economy. Direct expenditures in new CRE developments climbed from $201.4 billion in 2020 to $239.7 billion in 2021, according to the NAIOP Research report…

  • Demand for cold storage facilities heats up

    Demand for cold storage facilities heats up

    Refrigerated warehouses and cold storage facilities were once considered unattractive investments for several, salient reasons: exceedingly high construction costs, enormous power demands (and the expensive, complex infrastructure to satisfy them) and relatively low demand among end-users. The facilities are still complex and costly, but demand for them shot up quickly…

  • Luring employees back remains a work in progress

    Luring employees back remains a work in progress

    Landlords and companies alike are still struggling to pinpoint the perfect draw to lure employees back into traditional work environments, while careful to not present any indication of force. Because the great work-from-home experiment has worked so well for so many people and industries, certain employees are considering this arrangement…