Wednesday, November 27, 2024 | Baltimore, MD
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Downtown Baltimore gets first digital billboards in new district

At Charles and Lombard streets in downtown Baltimore, newly installed digital billboards flash images of art, ads and event promotions. The two video displays on office tower facades, unveiled Tuesday by the Downtown Partnership of Baltimore, are the first in a digital sign network designed to enliven the business district north of the Inner Harbor and promote area artists, businesses and events.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
‘Generational wealth, that’s what I’m doing it for’: Cambridge native opens taxi stand

At that time, Hall was in jail awaiting a trial. He was not able to go to the funeral of the woman he had been with for nine years. “With who I was and the things that I was connected to then, I didn’t get out,” he said. “(The judge) was scared to let me out.” When he was released from prison in January of 2015, Hall said he was determined to stay out of prison — and to be there for his son, K’Marion.

Ammoora, a restaurant in the Ritz-Carlton Residences, made Yelp’s Best New Restaurant of 2023 list.

Yelp named a Syrian and Levantine restaurant in Baltimore as one of the best new restaurants in the country this year. Ammoora in the Ritz-Carlton Residences in the Federal Hill neighborhood made the inaugural list of 25 “trendy” and recently opened restaurants by the business review website and app. Yelp announced its latest list, which includes restaurants from coast to coast, on Tuesday.

Developers unveil new website and renderings for the latest Harbor Point apartment project

Developers of Baltimore’s newest apartment project, a 500-unit development called Allied | Harbor Point, will begin preleasing in April 2024, with Kettler as the residential property manager. The development team, a joint venture of Armada Hoffler and Beatty Development Group, this week unveiled a new website and renderings for the project, which is nearing completion at 1402 Point Street. The website is www.alliedharborpoint.com.

 

Baltimore-area startup raises $5.3M to repurpose wood meant for the landfill

A Baltimore County startup has raised $5.3 million to use wood normally destined for the landfill to create tables, floors and other construction products. Cambium Carbon takes wood from trees that fall down during a storm or are cut down at construction sites and repurposes them for new uses. CEO Ben Christensen plans to use the latest round of funding led by MaC Venture Capital to add new products, launch a nationwide expansion and enhance the software side of the business.

Southfields of Elkton development kicks off $300M second phase

Hundreds of luxury apartments and single-family homes are underway as the second phase of a planned $800 million development in Elkton moves forward. The housing is the latest addition to the large-scale Southfields of Elkton that will convert 650 acres of remote land off of Interstate 95 and the Elk River into a mixed-use community anchored by retail and industrial complexes. Timonium-based Stonewall Capital is the master developer and visionary of the project that was unveiled in 2019.

Three baseballs sit in a field of turfgrass at Camp Nubability's annual kids camp for limb different children. This image was taken by one of the camp coaches, Caitlin Conner.
Four questions facing the Orioles at this week’s winter meetings

During his end-of-the-season news conference, Orioles executive vice president and general manager Mike Elias said it was too early to discuss ins and outs of the club’s plans for the offseason. Just two days before, an Orioles team that won more games than any other in the American League was bounced from the postseason without a victory. Elias was peppered with questions about his starting rotation, bullpen and other roster-related questions, almost all of which he deftly punted to the future.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Rite Aid pharmacists in Md. get OK to dispense prescribed hormonal contraceptives

Rite Aid Corporation announced Tuesday that customers in Maryland and four other states can now receive prescribed hormonal contraceptives by Rite Aid pharmacists at most store locations after completing an in-person private consultation. Pharmacists in Maryland, as well as California, New Hampshire, Nevada and Oregon, have gained the authority to prescribe hormonal contraceptives depending on each state’s laws and regulations.

Tech entrepreneur from Baltimore started the nation’s largest Black-owned fintech platform, a peer-to-peer microlender

Rodney Williams fondly recalls his days growing up in Northeast Baltimore, when he ran track, acted in drama classes and played high school football. The tech entrepreneur, now 39, also remembers how his mom and other family members struggled to make ends meet. His experiences led him in 2018 to create an online, peer-to-peer lending marketplace that he describes as “democratizing finance.” Earlier this year, SoLo Funds Inc. hit 1 million registered users, becoming, it says, the largest Black-owned consumer fintech — financial technology — company in the U.S.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Baltimore City planners review Harborplace redevelopment proposal

The Baltimore Planning Commission began the process Thursday of reviewing sweeping land use changes for the Inner Harbor that would allow a mixed-use development, including two tall towers of housing, to replace the aging Harborplace pavilions. The staff of the Baltimore City Planning Department recommended the commission adopt — with some changes — the zoning and other revisions that would pave the way for MCB Real Estate’s project during the commission’s first public hearing on the proposal.

Read More: Baltimore Sun

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