patrick turner
- The developer behind Silo Point, a $180 million waterfront condominium development in Baltimore City, is interested in buying a county-owned property at York
- The National Aquarium in Baltimore has sold its properties in Port Covington, disposing of the last remnants of a plan to build an animal rescue and care center in South Baltimore.
- The National Aquarium in Baltimore has sold its properties in Port Covington, disposing of the last remnants of a plan to build an animal rescue and care center in South Baltimore.
- The National Aquarium moving forward with its long-expressed goal of a new animal care and rescue center, buying a property in Jonestown to relocate operations from the Fells Point building where they have been based for more than two decades.
- Consider the city's fingers crossed. Baltimore's resident billionaire, Under Armour founder and CEO Kevin Plank, confirmed Friday what many had long-suspected — that he was the mystery buyer of roughly 43 acres of waterfront property in Westport at a bankruptcy auction earlier this year.
- More than 40 acres of waterfront sold Wednesday for $6 million after a sole bid from the group that filed foreclosure against Turner in December.
- Jeanine Turner and Jeffrey Kent pooled their resources as interior designer and master painter, respectively, into pop-up gallery projects that benefit the vacant property owner, the artist who needs exhibition space and, of course, the potential buyer, since everything is for sale.
- A roughly 43-acre group of waterfront properties in Westport is slated to go to foreclosure auction Wednesday, opening the opportunity for the land, once proposed for an ambitious development of homes, offices and shopping, to go to a new owner.
- After nearly two years presiding over bankruptcy proceedings that could determine whether developer Patrick Turner retains control of land in South Baltimore where he had planned an ambitious waterfront development, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Robert A. Gordon entered the court Friday with his mind made up.
- The saga of developer Patrick Turner's plan to develop a portion of the South Baltimore waterfront is scheduled to continue next month before a bankruptcy court judge, who could be asked to decide if the creditor can foreclose on the property.
- Developer Patrick Turner has a new group to negotiate with to try to preserve his role in an ambitious mixed use development project he had planned for waterfront property in Westport.
- A foreclosure auction of Westport property connected to developer Patrick Turner's ambitious, 42-acre waterfront plan was canceled Friday for a second time.
- U.S. bankruptcy judge Robert Gordon Tuesday denied a bid for more time sought by Westport developer Patrick Turner, who has been trying for a decade to turn an empty piece of Baltimore's western waterfront into a high-end, mixed use community.
- A U.S. bankruptcy court is scheduled to decide Tuesday whether to grant more time to developer Patrick Turner, who has tried for 10 years to transform a piece of the Westport waterfront from grassy marsh to a bustling downtown neighborhood.
- A lawsuit over the ownership of the Westport waterfront that was dismissed last month by a bankruptcy judge will be re-filed in a different court, an attorney for real estate developer Patrick Turner said Monday.
- Remember President Obama saying "You didn't build that"? It's something to remember as Exelon seeks to build its Baltimore headquarters with taxpayer help.
- The developers of the stalled Westport Waterfront filed a $225 million suit in bankruptcy court Wednesday alleging that out-of-state financiers posed as potential investors in the project and then conspired with others to upend development plans.
- The company affiliated with developer Patrick Turner that was planning to redevelop the waterfront of the Westport neighborhood in southwest Baltimore has filed for bankruptcy.
- The news that Patrick Turner's Westport Waterfront development is facing foreclosure has been taken in stride by Westport residents and city officials, who are not pegging all their expectations for the South Baltimore community on the long-stalled Turner project.
- Citigroup Global Markets Realty Corp. has filed a foreclosure case against the company that was planning to develop the waterfront in the Westport community of Baltimore.
- One of Baltimore's most prominent developers is facing two lawsuits for unpaid bills relating to long-stalled projects on the shores of the Middle Branch of the Patapsco River.
- Havre de Grace quickest to respond; Baltimore City provides incomplete information
- The tax bills on unsold condos at two luxury complexes in Baltimore just increased nearly $2.3 million, courtesy of assessments that acknowledge the units exist.
- Baltimore County paid for only County Executive's travel; Council members paid own way
- Baltimore's Board of Estimates has approved a fee formula that will dictate how much developers in South Baltimore pay for road improvements.
- Daredevil Nik Wallenda didn't fall but came close when crossing the Inner Harbor on a 1-inch wire 82 feet above the murky water.
- A large chunk of waterfront property in Port Covington is going on the auction block in June after its previous owner, Struever Bros. Eccles & Rouse, defaulted on a multimillion-dollar mortgage.
- About 200 condos at the Ritz-Carlton Residences and Silo Point, two luxury condo developments along Baltimore's Inner Harbor, are taxed as if construction never got off the ground even though they were built between 2007 and 2009.
- Baltimore elections officials predicted very low turnout at the polls Tuesday, as city residents vote in the general election
- Members of the Republican, Green and Libertarian parties are often divided by strong ideological differences in national politics. But in Baltimore, candidates from the three parties emphatically agree on at least one point: The long-running dominance of Democrats in city politics is detrimental.
- The private developers of two high-profile state projects are seeking financing through a program that lets wealthy foreigners invest $500,000 and, in return, go to the front of the line for green cards and possible U.S. citizenship.
- Two developers say they are planning to submit bids Friday to operate a casino in Western Maryland, and the head of the state slots commission said there are "multiple people interested" in the Baltimore slots license.
- After years of trademarking the Seacrets name, and plotting a franchise, CEO Leighton Moore filed paperwork this year to franchise the brand nationally. And Baltimore could be one of the first locations.
- State officials agreed Wednesday to extend the bidding deadline for the Baltimore slots license by nearly two months, a move that delays the selection process until after the city's contested mayoral primary in September.