NH Life Sciences sets course for growth
Industry group celebrates second year with more than 50 member companies
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RE/CON:
The Granite State’s Authority
on Real Estate and Construction News.
RE/CON is the New Hampshire Business Review’s monthly in-depth focus on the state’s real estate and construction industries. It is the Granite State’s best-read source for news, trends and insights in the commercial/industrial and residential marketplace.
RE/CON provides information that’s used not only by contractors, architects, equipment dealers, developers and others in the business, but by the rest of our readers — business owners and executives, the decision-makers who purchase the real estate and construction industries’ goods and services.
Each month, RE/CON features articles and other detailed information about new and upcoming projects and market trends as well as advice on the legal, financial and investment fronts.
For more information, please contact us: e-mail sales@nhbr.com phone (603) 624-1442 fax (603) 624-1310
Industry group celebrates second year with more than 50 member companies
A conceptual drawing of Seacoast Landing — the Torrington Properties incarnation of what will replace the Mall at Fox Run in Newington — shows a mix of stand-alone buildings with three anchor stores, pads for six retail/commercial interests, a medical building, and a retail/office collection of six more buildings.
NH Lottery's executive director Charlie McIntyre discusses how the organization's record-breaking revenues help aid the state's schools and nonprofit community
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
Learn more about Ahnen and how the association serves as the primary advocate for the Granite State’s acute care community and specialty hospitals
While ESOP transactions often deliver a fair market price, they can offer substantial tax benefits to the seller and to the company itself
A new survey from Stay Work Play NH, an organization devoted to the interests of younger men and women in New Hampshire, shows that adults aged 26 to 35 aren’t very optimistic when it comes to the life altering events of buying a home, starting a family and advancing their careers here.