Tucked away in a white-brick house with a bright blue porch in Browne's Addition is Cortner Architectural Co., a longtime Spokane architecture company that traces its roots back to the early 1920s.
The firm has been growing its client base steadily and
Some architects here say they're beginning to see a slowdown in a few design sectors, with some projects in the pipeline put on hold indefinitely due to the pandemic-induced economic slowdown.
Jeff Warner, principal with Spokane-based ALSC Architects
Over four decades ago, John Duncan went from cutting french fries in the basement of a Coeur d'Alene restaurant to opening his own wholesale produce business.
As it turns out, innovation runs in the family.
In March, Duncan Produce, the company the
Uncertainties in overseas markets due to COVID-19 will almost certainly put a dent in the sales of most Washington commodities abroad.
An observer of the state's grain market thinks wheat exports will remain unchanged this year, while the head of the a
Now is Share.Farm's time to shine, Vince Peak says.
The founder and CEO of the 2-year-old online farm-to-consumer market says the COVID-19 pandemic has presented as many opportunities for Share.Farm as it has challenges.
Washington state is now encouraging higher adoptions of solar energy systems in homebuilding as part of its drive to eliminate fossil fuel-generated electricity from the grid.
Discerning what can and can't be recycled can be as much of a hassle as trying to figure out where to dispose of nonrecyclables, says Andy Dunau, executive director of the Spokane River Forum.
That's why the nonprofit is expanding its waste directory
The owners of AquiPor Technologies Inc. claim that after about a decade of research and development, they've produced a porous, hardened material with the ability to absorb surface stormwater and alleviate drain flooding in heavily paved urban
Sales taxes traditionally have provided a relatively stable revenue source for states and local governments during previous economic downturns, but the toll the coronavirus pandemic is taking on the economy is different.
This isn't the Great Recession for Inland Nortwest bankers.
And that's a good thing, executives here say.
While the pandemic has brought a host of challenges, leaders at some banks and credit unions say financial institutions are in a much better