Bulfinch Crossing Residential Tower Tops Off
Presales and leasing for 368 apartments and 55 condos will begin in January at Bulfinch Crossing’s 46-story residential tower.
Presales and leasing for 368 apartments and 55 condos will begin in January at Bulfinch Crossing’s 46-story residential tower.
State Street Corp.’s recent decision to sublease two of its four Quincy office buildings totaling nearly 390,000 square feet shakes up a suburban submarket that’s been the heart of the financial service provider’s back office presence in Massachusetts. Will new projects Dorchester draw away tenants?
Office vacancies continued to fall in Boston while developers broke ground on projects that will add 2 million square feet of new workspaces in the second quarter.
State Street Corp. is offering to sublease its office space at two of the four buildings it occupies in Quincy, where it’s had a major back office presence for decades.
One Congress, the distinctive, 1 million-square-foot tower that will house State Street Corp.’s new headquarters, broke ground this morning.
Google’s workspaces in Cambridge’s Kendall Square will grow to 850,000 square feet with construction of a new 400,000-square-foot office tower and renewals for two other leases at Boston Properties’ Kendall Center development.
A 510,000-square-foot lease by State Street Corp. will anchor a $900 million office tower at Bulfinch Crossing, the 2.9-million-square-foot redevelopment of Boston’s Government Center garage property.
As projects in Somerville, East Boston, Allston-Brighton and South End move forward, developers of large vacant commercial properties in Newton and Woburn are laying out plans for mixed-use projects totaling over 3 million square feet.
After more than 20 years at State Street Corp., David Granese was hired this past March to head institutional banking at Radius Bank, a 30-year-old enterprise that began as a community bank owned by the Carpenters Union, currently with $1.1 billion assets under management.
The YMCA of Greater Boston last week presented State Street Corp. Chairman and CEO Jay Hooley, who recently announced his retirement at the end of the year, with its first annual 1851 YMCA Legacy Award for Corporate Citizenship in honor of Hooley’s 20-plus years of service, support and shared mission.
After more than 30 years with the company, State Street Corp. CEO Joseph L Hooley will retire at the end of the year, according to a regulatory filing this morning.
The financial services firm behind Wall Street’s “Fearless Girl” statue agreed to pay $5 million to settle federal allegations that it paid female executives less than their male counterparts.
State Street Corp. has agreed to pay more than $64 million to resolve the government’s criminal investigation into a scheme to defraud several of the bank’s clients through secret commissions applied to billions of dollars in securities trades.