News: Front Section

Havan joins Nitsch Engineering's transportation department as senior traffic engineer

According to Nitsch Engineering, Nick Havan, PE, PTOE, has joined the firm's transportation department as senior traffic engineer. Havan has 26 years of experience in both the public and private sectors, including 14 years of experience with the Massachusetts Department of Transportation. His expertise includes preparing traffic impact studies; integrating sustainable and multi-modal design elements; providing signal design; performing parking studies and analyses; providing way-finding design; preparing construction phase traffic and parking management plans; and performing peer reviews. Havan is a registered Professional Engineer in Massachusetts and New Hampshire, a certified Professional Traffic Operations Engineer, a certified Work-Zone Safety Specialist, and a certified Soil Evaluator in Massachusetts. He earned his B.S. in Civil Engineering from Wentworth Institute of Technology. Nitsch Engineering is a civil engineering, land surveying, transportation engineering, sustainable site consulting, planning, and GIS firm that provides services on private development, public building, and infrastructure projects. Nitsch Engineering has projects in 17 states and five countries. The company is the largest Woman-owned Business Enterprise (WBE) civil engineering firm in Massachusetts, and is also a certified WBE in New York, Virginia, and Pennsylvania. Since 1989, Nitsch Engineering has provided professional services to public agencies, academic clients, developers, corporate and institutional owners, architects, and other design professionals on a variety of project types.
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McEvoy of The Conrad Group brokers $2.9 million sale of industrial building

Hingham, MA The Conrad Group  has brokered the sale of 55 Research Rd., South Shore Park. The property consists of a 20,340 s/f single story manufacturing building on two acres of land.
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Investing in a falling rate environment - by Harrison Klein

Investing in a falling rate environment - by Harrison Klein

Long-term interest rates have fallen by 100 basis points, and the market is normalizing. In December of 2022 I wrote an article about investing in a high interest rate, high inflation market. Since then, inflation has cooled off, and the Fed has begun lowering their funds rate.
It’s time to get creative with closed college campuses - by Christian Koulichkov

It’s time to get creative with closed college campuses - by Christian Koulichkov

Facing higher costs, shrinking enrollments, reduced state funding and severe demographic headwinds, many colleges and universities in New England and the Northeast are fighting for survival. The latest to lose the battle is the 150 + year old University of the Arts in
5 Questions to ask when  choosing a real estate broker - by Elizabeth Perez Barlett

5 Questions to ask when choosing a real estate broker - by Elizabeth Perez Barlett

>They say, “April showers bring May flowers,” but this season may bring more movement in the housing market as springtime is one of the most popular times for home buying and selling. Although spring is one of the strongest seasons for the residential market, it may not be all rosebuds and butterflies if you don’t have the right advisors.
The doctor is in: How medical leases differ from retail and office spaces - by Brian Cafferty

The doctor is in: How medical leases differ from retail and office spaces - by Brian Cafferty

As healthcare facilities, often referred to as “Doc in a Box” clinics, increasingly move into traditional retail spaces, landlords are more frequently leasing to medical tenants. Unlike standard retail or office leases, medical facilities come with a unique set of considerations that must be carefully addressed to ensure a successful tenancy.