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Wildflower Ltd/Bjarke Ingels Group
Wildflower Ltd., a frequent lessor to Amazon and the company behind Robert De Niro s Wildflower Studios project in Queens, has purchased an industrial site in the South Bronx for about $11 million.
Wildflower bought the adjacent properties at 1340 Lafayette Ave., 749 Whittier St. and 745 Whittier St. in Hunts Point from a Long Island-based limited liability company, which had bought the sites for about $2.3 million in 2003, according to sources and property records. The lots span 55,000 square feet and include 110,000 buildable square feet.
Wildflower Managing Partner Adam Gordon declined to get into the specifics of the company s plans for the Bronx site, but he indicated that the firm could use it for a logistics facility, noting that Wildflower “continues to be very active in the logistics business” and that Hunts Point is “one of the most desirable logistics locations in serving New York City.”
The New York Court of Appeals’ 2012 opinion in Pappas v Tzolis, decided in the wake and spirit of that court’s rulings the year before in the Centro Empresarial v America Movil and Arfa.
GEICO Skytypers Air Show Team Returns Home to Perform During the 2021 Bethpage Air Show
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FARMINGDALE, N.Y., May 25, 2021 /PRNewswire/ The GEICO Skytypers Air Show Team will take flight during the 2021 Bethpage Air Show on May 29-30 along the shores of Jones Beach State Park, NY. The Long Island-based squadron of six World War II-era aircraft will perform their dynamic aerobatic precision flying demonstration for the hometown crowd both Saturday and Sunday during the Memorial Day weekend air show.
The six plane delta formation of the GEICO Skytypers Air Show Team flies over the Statue of Liberty.
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email How Pentagon Cash Helped Save Small Defense Companies During the Pandemic
Business leaders are now calling on defense officials and lawmakers to keep a policy that pays contractors more money up front.
As the world began shutting down amid the COVID-19 pandemic, Doug Carlberg worried about his San Antonio, Texas, factory that makes parts for military and commercial aircraft.
While his work making parts for combat jets like the F-35 stealth fighter remained constant, his business supplying commercial plane makers dried up, as passenger air travel nearly came to a halt. But a key Pentagon policy put in place early in the pandemic allowed him to make it through the year without having to lay off any of his 65 employees, Carlberg said.