RnR RV Center has bought 3 1/2 acres of land just west of its dealership in Liberty Lake and has broken ground on a $2.9 million expansion there. Ray Bunney, president of RnR RV, says the expansion involves constructing a 20-bay, service in
The Spokane area stands to get about $10.7 million in new federal transportation money depending on the outcome of congressional negotiations that could take place this month.Both houses of Congress have passed versions of a new, six-year bill,
Spokane-based Weldon Inc. is looking to trim off a share of the mens haircutting market in the Seattle area.Just over six months after the company opened its first six shops, all in the Spokane-Coeur dAlene market, it now hopes to open four
The owners of Fast Frames, a Colville-based embroidery equipment manufacturer, plan to develop a 96,000-square-foot industrial complex this summer on the West Plains and move their operation there. Their project also will include a 400-unit work on
Merlin Motors Inc., the young Renton, Wash.-based maker of Merlin Roadster three-wheel motorcycles, plans to move its Spokane Valley assembly facility into larger quarters as it ramps up production and prepares to release to consumers its high-end,
Spokane businessman Terry Tombari and his wife, TJ Tombari, plan to develop a $5 million retail center at the northwest corner of 44th Avenue and Regal Street, on Spokanes South Hill. Work on the project was to start this week, and the complex is
Mimi Ross Blank loves the Internet. The owner of Tiles by Mimi has found her own slice of heaven in Spokane by creating in her home studio expensive custom murals on tile for customers across the country.If it werent for the Internet, I
Businesses along Third Avenue are struggling to survive as work crews reconstruct the street and replace an important water main there. A half-dozen Third Avenue businesses say their revenues have dropped between 20 percent and 60 percent since
What used to be the boonies north of Spokane is booming with activity.Development is forging farther northward, away from well-establishedand still bustlingretail centers like NorthTown Mall and the Northpointe Plaza shopping say new homes
It was a good year, in 2004, for most of the Inland Northwests publicly traded companies, and their executives, in turn, reaped huge payoffs.Such executives, on average, saw their overall compensation skyrocket 63 percent in 2004, an annual a