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- A key group of city-owned properties on the west side of downtown is open for redevelopment, after years of legal wrangling and other delays that left the area languishing.
- Maryland's second-highest court on Tuesday upheld a Baltimore judge's decision to dismiss a multimillion-dollar lawsuit filed by the former developers of the "Superblock."
- The west side, Market Center, UniverCity Center, the Bromo Arts District — officials aren't quite sure what to call the blocks just west of downtown, where hundreds of publicly-owned properties lie vacant and deteriorating in depressing testimony to one of the city's biggest failed urban renewal efforts. But they're trying out different tag lines, as the city and other major landlords ease their grip on the neighborhood and turn it back to private hands, in hopes one will soon fit.
- A Baltimore judge ruled this week that she will not enforce her decision to dismiss a multimillion-dollar lawsuit filed by the former developers of the "Superblock" until an appellant court rules on the case.
- A Baltimore judge on Friday dismissed a multimillion-dollar lawsuit filed by the former developers of the "Superblock" that alleged the city illegally terminated their exclusive rights to build on the property.
- The power couple of Lisa Harris Jones and Sean Malone once again topped lobbying totals in Baltimore last year, bringing in $285,000 for their work in the city ¬— nearly double what businesses paid them a year before.
- A Baltimore judge rejected an attempt by city officials to dismiss a multimillion lawsuit filed by the former developers of the so-called "Superblock."
- The former developers of the long-stalled "Superblock" project have filed suit against city government, demanding more than $50 million after Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake canceled their exclusive rights to the west-side property.
- The former developers of the long-stalled "Superblock" project have filed suit against city government, demanding more than $50 million after Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake canceled their exclusive rights to the west-side property.
- The former developer of the long-stalled "Superblock" project has accused the city of improperly terminating its deal for the downtown west-side property — and demanding millions in compensation.
- Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake said Wednesday that she intends to seek new proposals to develop the long-stalled "Superblock" before year's end.
- The city needs to look at new ways to complete the long-stalled Superblock redevelopment project
- Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake won't grant another extension to the developers of the long-stalled "Superblock" project on the city's west side, putting the future of the ambitious plan in jeopardy.
- Mayor Rawlings-Blake stayed at Harris Jones' beach house over Memorial Day weekend
- The partners chosen six years ago to develop the "Superblock" on the west side of downtown Baltimore are again asking the city to give them more time before they must buy the property, according to the Baltimore Development Corp.