The following is a selection of media placements for Great Ink clients and a summary of each.
Avison Young
March 1, 2018
By Liam La Guerre
James Kinsey has joined Avison Young as principal and director of its burgeoning Tri-state investment sales division. His new role centers around expanding the firm’s investment sales platform in the region. Most recently, Kinsey was president of his investment sales firm Kinsey Capital. He has more than 15 years of commercial real estate experience and has brokered more than $625 million worth of properties.
Avison Young, Hodges Ward Elliott
March 1, 2018
By Rich Bockmann
The March issue of The Real Deal highlights both Avison Young and Hodges Ward Elliott as two growing players in the NYC real estate brokerage market that continue to expand and grab market share.
Thornton Tomasetti
February 27, 2018
By Liam La Guerre
Thornton Tomasetti welcomes Jim Dray as its Chief Information Officer in New York. He is a 30-year veteran information technology executive in the architecture, engineering and construction fields, and will oversee a team of 30 professionals firm-wide. Dray is responsible for all information technology operations at the firm as well as introducing new technologies. He was formerly a vice president at AECOM.
RAL
February 22, 2018
By Larry Getlen
The Commercial Observer profiles, Spencer Levine, the director of landscape architecture and site development at RAL Companies & Affiliates.
Rutenberg NYC
February 21, 2018
By James Nevius
The New York Post takes a look at apartment buildings built around 1868, a time where the first elevated railroad appeared, department stores opened their doors, and lavish homes in West and Greenwich villages were developed. Read about the city’s history during that era, and see available homes for sale in buildings built back then. Listings include 58 Greene Street in Brooklyn, a four-story brownstone asking $5.2 million by David Edwards at Rutenberg NYC.
Onyx Equities
February 19, 2018
By Mario Marroquin
This NJBIZ article focuses on John Saraceno Jr. and Jonathan Schultz, co-founders and managing principals of Onyx Equities, and their philosophy of never taking on too many projects, but taking it slow and steady, and focusing on certain geographical regions like NJ, NY, Pennsylvania and Connecticut, where the co-founders feel that they can be the best all the time. Since 2004, Onyx has held onto its roots as a suburban office redeveloper, but has begun its dive into retail, industrial and even a little bit of residential over the past two years.
Jonathan Rose Companies
February 19, 2018
By Kim Velsey
In The New York Times “renters” column, Yolanda Daniels, a mother of three and grandmother of two, is profiled. She talks about her new home at Via Verde, a sustainable development in the Bronx by Jonathan Rose Companies and Phipps House.
EW Howell Construction Group
February 16, 2018
By John Caufield
Robert Timperio, vice president of the healthcare division at EW Howell Construction Group, is quoted in a Building Design + Construction article that talks about the latest design trends in cancer centers around the country. How can you use design to help adjust to advances in medicine and technology? Cancer centers have become an all in one design and programming philosophy that help to better serve patients. EW Howell recently completed the 245,000-sf Stony Brook Hospital Medical and Research Translation (MART) Building and the 225,000-sf Hospital Pavilion. The eight-story MART is devoted to cancer research and care, and is the new home for Stony Brook University’s Cancer Center. The 10-story Hospital Pavilion contains 150 inpatient beds, 12 classrooms, and a 300-seat auditorium.
ABS Partners
February 15, 2018
By Liam La Guerre
The Plan details ABS Partners Real Estate’s purchase of the Hammacher Schlemmer building at 145 East 57th Street and its transformation of the space into boutique offices that rival those in Chelsea or the Flatiron District. ABS renovated the property and added prebuilt units on the seventh, 10th and penthouse floors, including high-end bathrooms and appliances, privately controlled heating, ventilation and A/C units, and left the spaces empty so tenants could customize.