Thursday, October 24, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Quantum Loophole breaks ground on 600-acre nature reserve at data center campus

Quantum Loophole has begun construction on a 600-acre nature reserve at its planned data center campus near Adamstown to capture carbon emissions generated by data center facilities. The company announced on April 22 that it broke ground on the reserve. A tree planting demonstration took place in March to kick off the beginning of the project.

Amid low Preakness turnout, ecstatic Seize the Grey owners give horse racing a shot of life

A crash course on the economics of modern racehorse ownership: Julie Hobson bought a 0.02% share of Seize the Grey for $127. When the horse won the Preakness Stakes on Saturday evening, she — and every other microshare owner — earned $158 of the $2 million purse. But Hobson also spent $2,000 just to get to Baltimore after her flight was delayed from her home in Northern California.

Longshoremen celebrate getting back to work at Port of Baltimore

Just hours before high tide, when officials planned to start refloating the enormous container ship that toppled the Francis Scott Key Bridge and restricted maritime traffic for two months, the longshoremen of Local 333 were dancing to vintage Jackson 5 tunes and slurping water ice. Eight weeks of angst had ended, and it might as well finish with a party. The longshoremen were going back to work, at long last.

Royal Caribbean, Carnival will cruise out of Baltimore for first time since Key Bridge collapse. Here’s when.

Royal Caribbean and Carnival are getting ready to sail out of the Port of Baltimore as the first cruise departures from the port since the March 26 collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge. The Port of Baltimore announced that Vision of the Seas, owned by Royal Caribbean, will embark on a five-night voyage on May 25 from Baltimore to Bermuda.

 

group of people riding horses
Inside Preakness’ costly hunt for younger fans

Horse racing powerhouse the Stronach Group has spent millions of dollars trying to lure younger fans and higher-profile horses to the Preakness Stakes, the second jewel of the sport’s Triple Crown and one of Maryland’s marquee sporting events. It seems to have been a bad bet. Long viewed as the anchor of the state’s storied but declining thoroughbred racing industry, Preakness has gone from a moneymaker to a financial loser in recent years.

 

Under Armour prepares for layoffs as sales decline

Under Armour is preparing to layoff an unspecified number of employees following a drop in sales in North America, the Baltimore-based company’s largest market. The company’s overall revenues were down 5% to $1.3 billion for the fiscal year ending in 2024. Under Armour expects to spend $70 to $90 million as it restructures operations and finances.

New developer confirmed for Silver Spring’s $3B Viva White Oak

One of Maryland’s most prolific developers confirmed it will break ground in 2025 on Viva White Oak, a multibillion-dollar project next to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in Silver Spring that’s languished for more than a decade. We reported in January that Baltimore-based MCB Real Estate was taking up the torch for the stalled project, and that it was anticipated to break ground in the latter half of next year, citing County Executive Marc Elrich’s budget proposal at the time.

Horse racing
Bars and restaurants place their bets on Preakness

Alcohol and Preakness weekend go together like Old Bay and crabs. You don’t need one to have the other, but it sure does help. Bars, restaurants and breweries in the Baltimore area are using the 149th running of the Preakness Stakes as an opportunity to carry on old traditions (like black-eyed Susans) and create new ones (like rye flights). They hope to gin up support at a time when interest in horse racing — and boozing — is on the wane.

 

Major cruise company to sail again from Port of Baltimore

Royal Caribbean International is bringing its cruises back to the Port of Baltimore this month in anticipation that crews will re-open a channel blocked since the collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in March. The cruise line’s Vision of the Seas will leave the Cruise Maryland Terminal on May 25 for a five-night trip to Bermuda, the Port of Baltimore said Wednesday.

New Maryland law protects fans from ticket scammers

Maryland entertainment venues applauded state leaders last week when Gov. Wes Moore signed into law a first-in-the-nation bill to protect consumers from ticket scams. The legislation, which will take effect July 1, 2024, will outlaw speculative tickets and hold ticketing platforms accountable for the validity of the tickets they sell. It is considered a victory for consumers, Maryland concert venues, artists and musicians.

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