Construction projects approaching $250 million are planned or under way in Kootenai County despite having three high-profile projects recently taken off the table in Coeur d'Alene.
The north Kootenai County city of Hayden looks to be in position for a
More than $500 million worth of multimillion-dollar construction projects are planned or underway this year in Spokane County.
That doesn't include any of the projects to be built under the $429 million school-funding measures concurrently approved in
JB LLC, the Seattle-based development company recently selected by Washington State University to redevelop the historic Jensen-Byrd Building and adjacent properties, has begun to share its $45 million-plus vision for the site with city planners.
A prede
Coeur d'Alene businessman Ron Ayers says the hotel he's planning would be the engine that drives an economic development campus, in addition to increasing lodging capacity near downtown Coeur d'Alene.
Ayers proposes to develop a $10 million, 112-ro
Heads of two of the Spokane area's largest commercial brokerages say their companies have tallied consecutive years of record volume in terms of sales and leasing combined.
Dave Black, CEO of Spokane-based NAI Black, says the brokerage saw an increase
Kent Hull, managing partner at Iron Bridge Office Campus, says his development companies are planning major projects in Spokane and Hayden that could total $70 million in construction value.
The project closest on the horizon would be Iron Bridge IV, a 9
Jeff Gallagher, owner of Gallagher Construction Group Inc., and Cory Yost, owner of Yost, Mooney & Pugh Contractors Inc., say they're merging their commercial construction contracting companies to form Yost Gallagher LLC.
The merged company initially w
Re/Max Infinity Group, the Coeur d'Alene-based franchise of Denver-based Re/Max International Inc., has opened a real estate office in Spokane, says Colleen Kelley, the franchise owner.
The office occupies 900 square feet of space in the Latah Creek Pl
Leaving a legacy to a charity can be a complex endeavor best accomplished through planned-giving strategies formed jointly by the donor, financial professionals, and fundraisers, says Kjirstin Graham, president of the Inland Northwest Planned Giving Counc
Catholic Charities of Spokane hopes to start construction this summer on another 51-unit residential building in the next phase of its Father Bach series of low-income apartments for the chronically homeless.
John Fisher, housing development manager for