
Kimbel Sells Fayetteville HQ to Natural Capital
Kimbel Mechanical Systems will remain in the properties under the sale-leaseback arrangement. read more >
Kimbel Mechanical Systems will remain in the properties under the sale-leaseback arrangement. read more >
Natural Capital’s new commercial real estate entity wears its heart in its name, Heartland Affordable Housing. But the private investment group’s motives aren’t just altruistic. read more >
A Fayetteville real estate investor paid $7.4 million for a 42,609-SF office building in south Springdale. read more >
The Arkansas-exclusive investment group that bought the Doctors Building of Little Rock last year has closed a securities offering with a haul of more than $41 million. read more >
Two high-profile mixed-use developments are making their way onto the commercial scenes in central and northwest Arkansas. read more >
A new all-Arkansas ownership and management team has a 21st-century vision for one of Little Rock’s history-making medical buildings, the 1962-vintage Doctors Building in midtown. read more >
Tandem transactions in midtown Little Rock introduced new ownership to neighboring medical office buildings. read more >
The Doctors Building and Midtown Medical Park off of University Avenue were both part of a $44 million deal that also included the former Sears properties. read more >
The broadcast license for KMYA-TV, Channel 49, that Soul of the South Network investors are fighting over was an important piece to a funding puzzle two years ago. read more >
The fledgling television network is the subject of at least two lawsuits in federal court and has been notified it owes $250,000 on a loan from the state. But at least one board member says he is hopeful that good things are in the works. read more >
Mac Hogan, who invested $375,000 in the fledgling television network, submitted a brief letter to Secretary Bill Campbell and board Chairman Ladly Abraham on Tuesday. The letter stated that Hogan was resigning from the board and all related entities. read more >
Less than two years after the launch of Soul of the South — backed by nearly $2 million awarded by the state — the television network is struggling to pay its bills, laying off employees and fighting at least one lawsuit. read more >