Category: AI
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Netflix’s Warner Bros. Buyout Could Reshape Hollywood’s Property Market
Real estate developer Daniel Kaufman examines Netflix’s potential Warner Bros. buyout and its impact on entertainment property markets. The merger would give Netflix control of more than 100M square feet of studio and office space, signaling a major shift in Hollywood’s ownership structure and production real estate strategy.
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Wall Street’s Newest A.I. Play: Parking Lots Turned Goldmines
If you had told me five years ago that Wall Street’s next billion-dollar bet would be… parking lots, I would’ve laughed. Yet here we are. The overlooked world of industrial outdoor storage (IOS) has suddenly become the darling of institutional investors, thanks to one unstoppable force: artificial intelligence. Why It Matters Data centers don’t just…
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Billion-Dollar Pledges vs. Ground Reality: Why California’s Housing Crisis Still Persists
In 2019, Silicon Valley’s tech giants—Google, Meta, and Apple—rolled out some of the most ambitious corporate housing commitments in history. Combined, their pledges totaled $4.5 billion, aimed squarely at easing the Bay Area’s affordability crisis. The plans sounded transformative: loans to affordable housing developers, building on company-owned land, and strategic partnerships with public agencies to…
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The Data’s Getting Weirder, the World’s Getting Louder
Hey everyone, If you’ve been following the markets, you probably felt the tremors this past week—even if you weren’t glued to the financial news. What started as another round of tariff threats from Trump quickly spiraled into something bigger: a clear sign that things aren’t just volatile, they’re vulnerable. Let’s start with the numbers. The…
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San Francisco’s Comeback: The Data Behind Our Contrarian Bet
For the past three years pundits have claimed that San Francisco was finished, that tech talent would never return, and that any capital deployed south of the Golden Gate was doomed. We disagreed, kept buying, and now the numbers are lining up with our thesis. Below you will find the latest data points real estate…
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Is 3D Printing the Future of Construction? Starbucks Thinks So
The future of construction might be arriving faster than most of us expected—and it’s being printed, not built. Starbucks recently opened a 3D-printed, drive-through-only store in Brownsville, Texas, marking one of the most visible uses of additive manufacturing in the commercial retail sector to date. At 1,400 square feet, the structure was constructed using a…
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AI-Powered Robotics Reshaping Home Construction: What It Means for Real Estate Developers and Investors
PulteGroup Pilots Hadrian X, a Robot That Constructs Structural Walls in a Single Day The real estate development landscape is shifting, and technology is leading the way. One of the nation’s largest homebuilders, PulteGroup, recently unveiled its latest foray into AI-driven robotic construction with the successful pilot of the Hadrian X system—an advanced automation tool…
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Trump’s AI Energy Strategy: A Boost for Data Centers or a Climate Setback?
The incoming Trump administration has set its sights on accelerating the growth of AI data centers, a critical driver of U.S. technological and economic competitiveness. With plans to address the power shortages hampering the industry, Trump’s energy policies could bring a mix of opportunity and controversy. The AI Blueprint: Energy Meets Expansion As AI technologies…
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OpenAI Leads Big Tech’s Real Estate Rebound with First New York Office
OpenAI is spearheading the tech sector’s resurgence in real estate with a landmark deal to establish its first New York office, marking a significant expansion on the East Coast. Strategic Expansion The San Francisco-based creator of ChatGPT has leased 90,000 square feet in the iconic Puck Building in Manhattan’s SoHo neighborhood. This deal, with landlord…
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Office Visits in Major Cities: August Trends and Insights
As we navigate the post-pandemic landscape, office visit trends in major cities offer a fascinating glimpse into the recovery and adaptation of urban workspaces. In August, office visits nationwide reached 68.8 percent of August 2019 levels, slightly below the recovery peak seen in July. Regional Highlights Miami, New York, Atlanta, and Dallas have outperformed the national…
