OneBeacon Insurance Group leases 188,857 s/f to The Shaw Group
OneBeacon Insurance Group, Ltd. has leased most of its 150 Royall St. office building to The Shaw Group Inc. The 188,857 s/f lease is for a term of ten and a half years. Shaw plans to relocate employees to 150 Royall St. beginning in June 2012.
CLW Real Estate Services Group principal Richard Bradbury represented OneBeacon, while Andy Majewski, Steve Clancy and Rachel Marks of CB Richard Ellis/New England represented the tenant.
OneBeacon will retain 65,000 s/f for its corporate services employees. The company sold its nonspecialty commercial lines and personal lines businesses over the past two years, which reduced its Canton office space requirements.
OneBeacon is a holding company that is publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange. OneBeacon's underwriting companies offer a range of specialty insurance products sold through independent agencies, regional and national brokers, wholesalers and managing general agencies. The company's businesses include OneBeacon Professional Insurance, International Marine Underwriters, OneBeacon Accident Group, OneBeacon Entertainment, OneBeacon Energy Group, OneBeacon Government Risks, A.W.G. Dewar (tuition refund), collector cars and boats written through Hagerty Insurance Agency, OneBeacon Technology Insurance, OneBeacon Specialty Property, OneBeacon Property and Inland Marine and OneBeacon Excess and Surplus Lines. The company also offers products and services to assigned risk markets through its AutoOne division. OneBeacon's insurance businesses are national in scope.
Boston, MA Newmark has completed the sale of 10 Liberty Sq. and 12 Post Office Sq. Newmark co-head of U.S. Capital Markets Robert Griffin and Boston Capital Markets executive vice chairman Edward Maher, vice chairman Matthew Pullen, executive managing director James Tribble,
To say that the effects of COVID-19 has transformed office leasing is an understatement. When COVID-19 was at its peak, office spaces were practically abandoned either through governmental mandates or through actions taken by businesses themselves.
While there is some flexibility when structuring a like-kind exchange, some important requirements must be met. A mistake can ruin your exchange. Here are five mistakes to avoid:
Coming out of the pandemic, a client with three hotels in Provincetown, Mass., needed ways to let the world know his properties were open for business for the 2021 tourist season.
Many real estate investors do not understand the specific requirements that must be met to secure the benefits of a tax-deferred 1031 exchange. For example, the replacement property must be identified within 45 days of the closing date of the relinquished property.