Steve Marcussen and Jonathan Sklar of Cushman & Wakefield’s Los Angeles office share thoughts on how not-for-profit organizations can be more effective with their real estate assets and in implementing projects with outside real estate brokerage advisors.https://digitalcommons.nyls.edu/rooftops_project/1019/thumbnail.jp
From the very beginning of its new headquarters project, The Bowery Residents’ Committee set out not...
At manyplaces of worship, responsibility for oversight of the physical facilities falls to administr...
Rooftops Project Profile - Human Rights Watch - Every day, not-for-profit organizations face “stay o...
Steve Marcussen and Jonathan Sklar of Cushman & Wakefield’s Los Angeles office share thoughts on how...
In a conversation with Kelly Padden and Professor James Hagy of The Rooftops Project, Jon Denham and...
How can not-for-profit organizations better prepare themselves to launch and sustain effective relat...
Federal and state law can impose compliance requirements affecting both disposing of and transacting...
How can arts organizations with an aspiration to build their own facilities connect project design b...
While the concept of executive office suites has existed for decades, in recent years innovations ha...
When the California Endowment planned new headquarters space for its own operations, its vision also...
Not only can architects create great space, they can also inspire better connections between the bui...
In a recent visit with the Rooftops Project\u27s Alicia Langone and Professor James Hagy, constructi...
What is your real estate strategy when you are the first on-the-ground representative of a social se...
A religious congregation envisions a new building better suited to its needs than its existing facil...
Few not-for-profit organizations can claim to have made a dramatic, permanent, outdoor visual impact...
From the very beginning of its new headquarters project, The Bowery Residents’ Committee set out not...
At manyplaces of worship, responsibility for oversight of the physical facilities falls to administr...
Rooftops Project Profile - Human Rights Watch - Every day, not-for-profit organizations face “stay o...
Steve Marcussen and Jonathan Sklar of Cushman & Wakefield’s Los Angeles office share thoughts on how...
In a conversation with Kelly Padden and Professor James Hagy of The Rooftops Project, Jon Denham and...
How can not-for-profit organizations better prepare themselves to launch and sustain effective relat...
Federal and state law can impose compliance requirements affecting both disposing of and transacting...
How can arts organizations with an aspiration to build their own facilities connect project design b...
While the concept of executive office suites has existed for decades, in recent years innovations ha...
When the California Endowment planned new headquarters space for its own operations, its vision also...
Not only can architects create great space, they can also inspire better connections between the bui...
In a recent visit with the Rooftops Project\u27s Alicia Langone and Professor James Hagy, constructi...
What is your real estate strategy when you are the first on-the-ground representative of a social se...
A religious congregation envisions a new building better suited to its needs than its existing facil...
Few not-for-profit organizations can claim to have made a dramatic, permanent, outdoor visual impact...
From the very beginning of its new headquarters project, The Bowery Residents’ Committee set out not...
At manyplaces of worship, responsibility for oversight of the physical facilities falls to administr...
Rooftops Project Profile - Human Rights Watch - Every day, not-for-profit organizations face “stay o...