Google Cloud and Spokane-area industry partners will host the first annual Inland NW Cyber Security Conference Thursday, Nov. 17, at the Historic Davenport Hotel, at 10 S. Post.
Before COVID-19 turned the whole world upside, some in the financial industry were preparing for the future.
At Independent Wealth Connections, we started adapting six years ago. I wish I could say I had a crystal ball that predicted the ramifications o
AHBL Inc., a Tacoma, Washington-based structural and civil engineering fim, has moved its Spokane office to the third floor of the Chase Building, at 601 W. Main, in downtown Spokane, says Tim Hansen, AHBL's chief operating officer.
On Friday, Nov. 11, Tim Loucks, founder of Square Keg LLC, will appear on ABC's 'Shark Tank,†a reality TV show in which budding entrepreneurs are given the opportunity to present their business ideas to the show's celebrity investors.
Since Hart Capital Advisors was acquired by Denver-based Mercer Global Advisors Inc. in the waning moments of 2020, the investment advising office has added an array of services.
After a 40-year career as an architect and 22 years into his retirement, Ron Sims, former principal of ALSC Architects PS, says he's satisfied with the contributions he's made to commercial, educational, and government projects in the Spokane
A sandwich shop named after the owners' family pet will occupy the former Azar's Restaurant building on north Monroe Street.
Jennifer Hesseltine says she and her husband, Aaron, will open Zozo's Sandwich House, at 2501 N. Monroe, in December.
While the pyramid-shaped concrete building at 1520 W. Third on the west edge of downtown still has Imprezzio's name on it, the company hasn't occupied the building since the early days of COVID-19.
Founded in Spokane 2004 by entrepreneurs
Evident 316 Inc., the Spokane-based vehicle-brakes service shop operator that does business as Golden Rule Brake, is expanding into Idaho.
Dallas Low, third-generation owner of Golden Rule, says construction will begin in December on a
The Spokane office of Seattle-based engineering company Parametrix Inc. is receiving more work than its staff here can handle and is having to share some of that work with its other offices.
Roger Flint, chief operating officer at Parametrix, is based