chesapeake realty partners
- Greenberg Gibbons on Wednesday said it had purchased a Reisterstown shopping center for $35 million, deepening the firm's presence in Baltimore County.
- Say Yes to Education is about a lot more than free college.
- Morton J. Macks, an influential developer who founded Chesapeake Realty Partners and Macks Homes, which grew into the Baltimore metropolitan area's largest family owned home builder, died.
- Investors who tried for years to get a stake in 1st Mariner Bank have closed on their purchase of the Baltimore institution.
- The investor group buying 1st Mariner Bank in Baltimore said Monday that they've received necessary federal and state regulatory approvals and expect to close on the deal this month.
- A slate campaign account formed by Baltimore County Executive Kevin Kamenetz took in another $14,000 over the past four months, all from development interests, campaign finance records show.
- The deal to buy 1st Mariner Bank started with an irresistible offer — to two men who had nothing to do with the company.
- Business leaders are investing in education in Baltimore, and not just out of charity, or to "give back." While both are worthy purposes, our business leaders recognize the bottom line value in a growing and diverse Baltimore economy. Investment in education will make that a reality. Various levels of government are reciprocating, and the legislative session and upcoming gubernatorial race offer a perfect time to take that work to the next level
- 1st Mariner Bank will be sold to a group of investors who will recapitalize it with about $100 million to meet regulatory standards, its parent company said Monday.
- The developers of the Winthrop, a two-building luxury apartment complex on Dulaney Valley Road in Towson, said at a groundbreaking ceremony Tuesday that the first 295-unit building could be completed in 12 months.
- Chesapeake Realty Partners of Owings Mills said it has partnered with Bernstein Management Corp. in Washington to build six apartment communities in Maryland, Virginia and Washington.
- Development began late last month on the luxury apartment buildings that will replace the Dulaney Valley Apartments in Towson, with leasing for the first of two four-story buildings scheduled to begin next May.
- Baltimore County's Design Review Panel on Wednesday conditionally approved plans for a pair of luxury apartment buildings containing 430 units at the site of Dulaney Valley Apartments on Dulaney Valley Road in Towson.
- The Howard County Planning Board approved final plans Thursday for three projects — an expansion at The Mall in Columbia and apartment complexes in downtown Columbia and Elkridge.
- Dulaney Valley Apartments in Towson have been sold and will be torn down and redeveloped as luxury apartments with triple the density at a cost of $100 million, the seller and buyer have confirmed.
- Dulaney Valley Apartments in Towson have been sold and will be torn down and redeveloped as luxury apartments with triple the density at a cost of $100 million, the seller and buyer have confirmed.