Commercial real estate broker David Choate looks back on 35-year career
NH Business Review interviewed Choate at the International Marketplace, located at the Pease International Tradeport, where Choate helped negotiate many deals over the years.
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A $250,000 commitment from the Lincoln Financial Group Foundation has helped the Campaign for Red River Theatres in Concord reach the $1 million mark.
Red River Theatres, formed in 2000, is in the midst of a $1.8 million construction campaign to build and operate a three-screen theater in downtown Concord. The largest of the three cinemas within Red River Theatres will be known as the “Lincoln Financial Group Cinema.”
The goal of the new venue, part of the Capital Commons on Concord’s South Main Street, is show between four and six films each week, offering films not otherwise available in central New Hampshire, including cutting-edge art house films, first-run independent films, foreign, documentaries, classics, local and regional films, and films on the festival circuit.
Red River Theatres is projected to open in the summer of 2007 and will show films 363 days per year.
NH Business Review interviewed Choate at the International Marketplace, located at the Pease International Tradeport, where Choate helped negotiate many deals over the years.
The collaborative has some 475 members spread across communities in the region and representing a broad range of business, health care and education interests.
Fidelity Investments announced Wednesday that New Hampshire is one of four Fidelity sites that will transition to a full-time, on-site schedule beginning in September
Business and event happenings around the state of NH
The Latest is a roundup of the comings and goings of the movers and shakers in NH's business community
North Country Healthcare on Monday, April 13, released a report summarizing feedback from a series of community listening sessions held earlier this year across the region, highlighting widespread concern about access to care, staffing and communication, along with strong support for keeping local hospitals open.
Morrison Hospital Association, a nonprofit senior care provider in northern New Hampshire, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection April 10, citing mounting debt — including a nearly $23 million federal loan — and lingering financial effects from the COVID-19 pandemic.
After two choppy years for dealmakers, 2026 is starting with a very different tone, one that many business owners have been waiting for. While the past few years brought tariff swings, interest rate volatility and a cautious lending environment, the fundamentals are shifting in a way that increasingly favors sellers, especially those in the lower-middle-market (LMM).
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