777 Main St.

Café opening Tue. at 777 Main apts.

South Windsor's Blue State Coffee says its inaugural downtown Hartford café on street level of the 777 Main St. apartment tower will debut on Tuesday.

🔒Landlords’ downtown apartments amenities wish-list

Yisroel RabinowitzBrooklyn, N.Y., owner of The Grand apartments, 201 Ann Uccello; and 11 Asylum St. office building"As...

Regulators reverse course on multi-unit solar installs

The Connecticut Public Utilities Regulatory Authority on Wednesday changed its mind on how much landlords of multi-unit complexes can charge tenants for power coming from a solar system or other renewable installation.

One 777 Main sub returns

One of the subcontractors renovating a former downtown office tower into high-rise apartments is back at work and a second is close to returning after being sidelined for breaching state labor rules, authorities say.
- Advertisement -

Doosan extends commercial building partnership

South Windsor fuel cell manufacturer Doosan Fuel Cell America has extended the partnership with a Swiss manufacturer to make it easier to install fuel cells at commercial buildings.

Hartford skyscraper installs 400kw fuel cell

Downtown Hartford residential high-rise 777 Main St. installed its 400-kilowatt fuel cell from South Windsor's Doosan.

777 Main anticipates fuel cell delivery

Bruce Becker, the developer of downtown Hartford apartments in the former Bank of America tower, is expecting delivery Thursday of a 400-kilowatt fuel cell.

Becker expects 777 Main St. apartment conversion done by summer

Fairfield developer Bruce Becker said he expects to have tenants moving into his 777 Main St. high-rise apartment complex in downtown Hartford sometime in the spring.
- Advertisement -

777 Main’s gritty power-bath draws gripes

A solution has been reached between the city Health Department and the cleaning subcontractor scouring the grimy exterior of the downtown Hartford skyscraper, 777 Main St., which is being converted to high-rise apartments.

CT property owners slow to submeter

Connecticut multi-unit property owners haven't been in a rush to charge commercial and residential tenants for their individual energy use since the state approved the practice — known as submetering — in mid-July.
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Stories

More Business News

Movers & Shakers

More Movers & Shakers | Submit an Announcement
ADVERTISEMENT

Thought Leadership

More Thought Leadership

Career Opportunities

Project Development/Sales

Borghesi Building & Engineering, Co., Inc.
,
Torrington, CT
Base salary plus commission. Range $70,000-$170,000 per year.
More Jobs | Submit a Job
More Events | Submit an Event