NEW YORK, NY - 2020 was Dwight Capital’s strongest year to date, with more than $3.6 billion in real estate financings (including Interest Rate Reductions) spanning 43 states. Dwight increased its servicing volume to over $6 billion under management and was once again one of the most active, direct HUD lenders in the country, continuing its industry leading position as a top-5 HUD lender for the sixth consecutive year.
Dwight’s overall lending volume more than tripled since 2019, and the company closed a record month with over $565.84 MM in financings in December. In addition, Dwight Capital acquired Love Funding, another prominent HUD lending company, towards the end of HUD’s 2020 fiscal year. The Love Funding acquisition was a strategic move that allowed Dwight to strengthen its operational expertise by adding key leaders in management, underwriting, asset management, and closing.The additional staff and expertise better positions Dwight Capital for future growth and success
In honor of Beethoven’s 250th birthday, the Boulder Chamber Players commissioned an intriguing theatrical-musical event:
Incessant Hum: Beethoven 2020, featuring the later works, which were composed after Beethoven became deaf. Artistic director Barbara Hamilton enlisted the aid of award-winning actor-director Mare Trevathan and playwright Jeffrey Neuman, himself profoundly hearing impaired, to create the piece. The task was daunting, Neuman says, “because I wanted to serve Beethoven well both the music and the man and because I’d never really written about hearing loss, a subject that seemed a bit too close to home.” The result features acclaimed actors Chris Kendall as Beethoven and Chelsea Frye as Elise a name familiar to every piano student who ever attempted Beethoven’s lyrical Für Elise (Bagatelle No. 25 in A Minor) . The stream is $25 for families, $10 for individuals and $5 students/unemployed; sign up at coloradochamberplayers.org.
Created: December 09, 2020 04:36 PM
It’s been six months since the riots left numerous businesses on St. Paul’s University Avenue damaged.
New windows went up on Wednesday morning at St. Paul’s Century Plaza, replacing ones damaged in the summer’s civil unrest. With the windows up, we feel more alive, and looking to the future,” said Century Plaza co-owner Gloria Wong.
The last six months, Wong said, have been emotionally draining, helping keep some dozen-plus businesses inside the plaza stay afloat after the damage while also feeling the lingering economic pain of the pandemic. We re willing to do that to sacrifice for some of the rent that they cannot pay,” Wong said. “Their business [isn t] doing well either.