Silicon Valley investor group WTI Inc. is developing Ariva, a 754-unit apartment complex. The first units are expected to open by the end of 2021.
Eli Segall
Eli Segall joined the Review-Journal in August 2016 after covering real estate and other business topics for four years at the Las Vegas Sun. He also worked for the Silicon Valley/San Jose Business Journal, The Associated Press and other news groups. Segall has a bachelor’s in political science from the University of Michigan and a master’s in journalism from the University of Maryland. His awards include 2017 Story of the Year from the Nevada Press Association.
Circa reflects much about the developer behind it — an old-school-style operator with a visible presence and a big personality.
Allegiant Air’s parent company posted another quarterly loss Wednesday amid the still-raging coronavirus pandemic but cited “modest, yet consistent” improvements.
Tony Hsieh’s DTP Companies purchased Zappos’ headquarters, the former Las Vegas City Hall, for $65 million from landlord Andrew Donner and partners, records show.
Developer Jeff LaPour told the Review-Journal last week that he might restart construction of Narrative.
Hughes Corp. and project partner Riverside Investment & Development announced they have opened an office skyscraper in downtown Chicago.
The firm behind a proposed chain of Atari-themed hotels in Las Vegas and other cities unveiled more details and made big promises Wednesday.
Los Angeles investor Jonathan Kermani bought the building for almost $4.3 million.
The nearly 44-acre site is just west of Interstate 15 at state Route 161, on the way to California.
The project would be developed in phases. Universal Health Services expects to start construction next year and finish the full build-out in 2035.
Las Vegas home prices set another all-time high last month, continuing a “remarkable” streak amid an otherwise badly battered economy, a new report says.
The new record shouldn’t be much of a shock, given the market’s surprising performance in an otherwise dreadful economy.
Raiders owner Mark Davis, after bailing on plans to build a house in a wealthy Las Vegas enclave, has bought a bigger plot across town in the Henderson mountains.
The developer of an upscale Henderson community sold an 8,838-square-foot home for $6.5 million.
Developer Bob Schulman has opened another rental property crammed with amenities at a time when the coronavirus pandemic has battered Las Vegas’ economy and cast a shadow over the rental market.