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DALLAS
BUSINESS JOURNAL
With their collective fingers firmly on the pulse of Dallas' ever-changing business climate, the staff of this locally- and nationally-respected publication has deferred to MJS Realty, Inc. time and again as a lead development story as well as calling upon the expertise of our president and founder, Mark J. Small, to characterize market conditions and fluctuations. |
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BLACK'S
GUIDE Having served many terms on this pervasive publication's Board of Advisors, MJS Realty's President Mark J. Small has been a proud contributor to the Guide's informative mixture of real estate product information and market characterization. Black's Guide is an indispensable instrument for gauging the health of Dallas' real estate economy, indoctrinating market newcomers and providing validation and strategic planning support to local real estate mavens. Deepen your knowledge of local market dynamism over the previous seasons by viewing the two articles Mr. Small has penned for the Black's Guide: "Will Tenants Seeking Space Find Bargains in the Future?" (Winter/Spring 1999) and "Tenant Sticker Shock Reaches Epidemic Proportions" (Winter/Spring 1998). |
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DALLAS
BUSINESS JOURNAL Basing their roster on the total square footage of local commercial space developed in 1999 by metro area developers, the Dallas Business Journal ranked the metroplex's largest commercial developers in their April 7-13, 2000 issue. Placing sixteenth overall, MJS Realty, Inc. had 884,000 square feet under local development in 1999, primarily comprised of the Centura Towers Master-planned Development of North Dallas and Churchill Tower in Park Central. |
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DALLAS
BUSINESS JOURNAL In their January 29, 1999 publication, those in-the-know at the Dallas Business Journal ranked the metroplex's largest commercial construction projects by total construction costs. MJS Resources, L.P., a companion to MJS Realty, Inc., made two appearances on this consecrated roster, showing up at number 6 with Centura Tower I and manifesting again at number 14 with Churchill Tower. MJS Realty, Inc. is honored to have ranked among some of the most impressive owners and developers in town. |
| BLACK'S NORTH CENTRAL EXPRESSWAY MAP A special publication of Black's Guide, this sector-specific map details the northern section of Interstate 75 as it travels through Dallas and Richardson, ranging from Uptown to South Plano with a diameter of approximately 2 miles. MJS Realty's Churchill Tower is one of the newer building entries on the map, commanding a prominent position in the Park Central submarket. |
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BLACK'S
PLATINUM CORRIDOR MAP A second, widely-referenced sectorial map, the Black's Platinum Corridor edition traverses a lucrative 13.7-mile stretch of the Dallas North Tollway as it bisects Dallas, Farmers Branch, Addison, Carrollton, Plano, and Frisco. 75 Class "A" buildings totaling 9.7 million square feet have been constructed in the Platinum Corridor since 1997, among them MJS Realty's Centura Tower I. |
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COMMERCIAL PROPERTY NEWS
In early 1999, when this well-known trade publication hosted its annual Newsmakers Luncheon, "The Outlook for Leasing, Investment & Development in Dallas," Dallas had recently seen its first upturn in office vacancy rates since 1992, and absorption was expected to slow. However, speakers in attendance at the luncheon, among them Mr. Mark J. Small, remained optimistic about the market and pointed to continued strong demand and probable absorption. |
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NATIONAL
REAL ESTATE INVESTOR MJS Realty has been pleased to find our firm name featured between the information-saturated pages of National Real Estate Investor on several occasions over recent years -- first in early 1999 with the appearance of 1998's survey of top office developers and owners and again in October of 1999 when MJS President Mark J. Small joined other local experts in a roundtable discussion of the Dallas real estate market's current status. The Office Developers Survey for 1998 profiles one of the most active office development periods of the 1990s, a memorable year standing in stark contrast to the dire times of the late 80s and early 90s. And the Dallas RoundTable Special Edition chronicles a 1999 meeting among some of Dallas' most prominent real estate luminaries, an extended discussion which took place over an afternoon spent at the Mansion on Turtle Creek in Dallas. |