DLP Real Estate Capital Acquires the Edge at Kutztown, a Student Housing Community prnewswire.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from prnewswire.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
/PRNewswire/ DLP Real Estate Capital, a private financial services & real estate investment firm, has promoted Scott Meyers to President of DLP Lending..
DLP Real Estate Capital Acquires Lafayette Place, a Multifamily Community in Oxford, MS
News provided by
Share this article
Share this article
ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla., May 24, 2021 /PRNewswire/ DLP Real Estate Capital, a private financial services and real estate investment firm, announced its acquisition of Lafayette Place, (now renamed DREAM Oxford), a 234-unit multifamily property, located in Oxford, MS. The addition of the community to DLP s portfolio of 14,000 apartment units continues the company s mission to do good through impact investing.
DLP Real Estate Capital
Don Wenner, Founder and CEO of DLP Real Estate Capital commented, We are extremely pleased to add Lafayette Place to our portfolio of multifamily communities. Situated close to Ole Miss University and the busy Oxford downtown area, the property will offer hardworking individuals and families convenient and affordable housing options. We look forward to bringing our DLP culture of Wow to current and future
New holistic recovery center to offer long-term follow-up to avoid relapse
After more than three years of dreaming big, encountering starts and stops, and searching for the right partners to support her vision, Patti Senn, a licensed addiction counselor, plans to open Soul Solutions, a combination outpatient treatment program/recovery center/coffee shop this summer at the site of the former AAA North Dakota building, 1801 38th St. S. in Fargo. 8:15 am, May 17, 2021 ×
Patti Senn is a licensed addiction counselor who is starting a new rehab and recovery outpatient model called Soul Solutions in Fargo. David Samson / The Forum
FARGO As a licensed addiction counselor for 20 years, Patti Senn had grown frustrated with the revolving door nature of substance-abuse treatment.