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Real Estate Developers

BUSINESS
February 18, 2009 | Stuart Pfeifer
Was it the real estate downturn, or were people misled into a risky investment scheme? That's the question at the center of a lawsuit filed Tuesday that accuses Orange County real estate lender Dan J. Harkey of bilking dozens of investors out of more than $15 million. In an added twist, the investors claim that their money helped fund the election of Harkey's wife, state Assemblywoman Diane L. Harkey (R-Dana Point).
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CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
January 9, 2009 | Jessica Garrison
A coalition of Los Angeles business groups put forward an affordable-housing plan Thursday that its leaders said would lead to more apartments and condos for working people without imposing restrictions that could cast a pall over entrepreneurial efforts. Its centerpiece is a network of "housing incentive zones" where developers building housing with at least some workforce units would be allowed to relax height and parking requirements and receive expedited approvals.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
December 15, 2008 | Ann M. Simmons, Simmons is a Times staff writer.
The first sign of trouble came almost immediately after Kurt and Michelle Dahlin moved into Lancaster's new Westview Estates in March 2007. The water slowed to a trickle midway through showering. The toilet tank took two hours to refill. The family often was forced to bathe at 4 a.m. -- before the neighbors awoke and the water flow became a dribble. Some days, there was no water at all. Things only got worse as more homeowners moved into the gated community on the outskirts of Lancaster.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
December 12, 2008 | Phil Willon
A Los Angeles condominium developer said Thursday that he has abandoned his dream of adorning a downtown building near Staples Center with a 14-story tall digital sign, inspired by futuristic scenes in the science fiction thriller "Blade Runner." But he still may erect a 150-foot-high display beaming down on nearby Figueroa Street. That proposed sheet of light would be part of a new special signage district approved unanimously by the city's Planning Commission on Thursday. The approval comes as city officials struggle to contain the proliferation of digital billboards and vinyl "supergraphics" that have raised the ire of neighborhoods citywide.
BUSINESS
July 22, 2008 | Roger Vincent, Times Staff Writer
Developer Wayne Ratkovich had little idea 30 years ago when he and his partners bought an unwanted office building in downtown Los Angeles that a forgotten gem lay waiting. The office market at the time was hot for glass and steel towers, and to hell with the old piles such as the Art Deco-style James Oviatt Building. The former UCLA football player in his 30s wasn't sure exactly what "Art Deco" encompassed. What he uncovered was an architectural treasure that he proceeded to bring back to life.
TRAVEL
May 19, 2008 | Christopher Reynolds, Times Staff Writer
The desert backcountry of San Diego County has always been a great place for long shadows -- the wiry ocotillo stalks at dawn, the oasis in Palm Canyon, the outline of a bighorn sheep on a rocky ridge at sunset. But in Borrego Springs right now, nobody throws more shade than a slim, 6-foot newcomer from Sherman Oaks named Gregory Perlman.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
April 8, 2008 | Tami Abdollah, Times Staff Writer
Eight years ago, Brian A. Sweeney, a Manhattan Beach real estate investor and developer, began buying land in the Santa Monica Mountains. As environmentalists watched, he persuaded owners to sell him 26 parcels of prime coastal real estate. Piece by piece, he got L.A. County permission to alter boundaries that added road access and filed plans to develop homes. When he was done, Sweeney had quadrupled the market value of the land, without hammering a single stick into the ground.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
March 16, 2008 | Jennifer Oldham and Ann M. Simmons, Times Staff Writers
Hundreds of thousands of drivers daily thread their way through the spaghetti-like interchange of Interstate 5 and the Antelope Valley Freeway, and some may well recall its spectacular collapse in the 1994 Northridge earthquake. Few, however, probably are aware of the six-year development battle raging over the jagged ridgelines cradled between the intersecting freeways at the Newhall Pass.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
March 11, 2008 | David Zahniser, Times Staff Writer
Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa's top appointee on the city Planning Commission sent an e-mail to neighborhood activists asserting that a new city ordinance that allows housing developers to roll back zoning rules may violate state law.
CALIFORNIA | LOCAL
December 21, 2007 | Ari B. Bloomekatz, Times Staff Writer
Community activists filed a lawsuit Thursday in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles alleging that city agencies stood idly by while dozens of residents at the Alexandria Hotel were illegally evicted and that basic services were not provided for remaining tenants. "I haven't taken a bath in a month," said Leonard Woods, who has lived at the Alexandria for a decade. "There's no hot water. The elevator doesn't work. Is that severe enough for you?"
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