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Growth and development

    Indoor pickleball company plans 30 locations in Baltimore and beyond
    Howard County-based Dill Dinkers plans to bring at least 30 new indoor pickleball locations to the Baltimore region and parts of Delaware over the next decade.
    People play pickleball on opening day at the Dill Dinkers' Finksburg location of their indoor pickleball court franchise.
    Chasing Chasen: Small business scores big win over Baltimore developer as legal woes mount
    The namesake company of Baltimore developer Brandon Chasen is facing additional legal troubles large and small.
    Patryk Tararuj’s business, Green Apple Cleaning of Baltimore, won a suit against Chasen Cos. this month.
    Angry residents push back against proposed 70-mile power line across Central Maryland
    The Maryland Piedmont Reliability Project would bring a 70-mile energy transmission line to central Maryland. But the plan to slice through three counties to fuel data centers is worrying residents in Baltimore, Carroll and Frederick counties.
    Children are seen holding signs opposing the Maryland Piedmont Reliability Project in Carroll County at a public information session held at the Westminster Senior Center on July 11, 2024.
    Johnston Square revival continues with project for new apartments, library
    The city now hopes to expand the whole-block model used in the tiny East Baltimore neighborhood to more parts of the city, perhaps using financing methods usually reserved for commercial developments.
    Properties on Biddle Street in Johnston Square that ReBUILD Metro will convert into housing for school employees in a January file photo.
    Maryland residents voice concerns about planned new transmission lines across counties
    An environmentally-focused upgrade to Maryland’s electric grid will require more than 70 miles of overhead powerlines across several counties.
    A historic house and power lines in Annapolis.
    Red Maple Place clears another hurdle in East Towson
    Red Maple Place, a proposed 56-unit housing development in historic East Towson, will not be subject to new design standards.
    A rendering shows Homes for American's plan for Red Maple Place, an apartment building on Joppa Road that would have 50 affordably priced units and six market-rent units. A Circuit Court judge has given a green light to the controversial proposal.
    University of Maryland doctors to move into former Target space at Mondawmin in 2025
    University of Maryland Faculty Physicians plans to open a doctors’ office at Mondawmin Mall, aiming to fulfill a community need.
    University of Maryland doctors will move into a space that was left empty when Target left Mondawmin Mall.
    How an Afghan refugee with no grocery experience opened Columbia’s go-to market
    Mohammed Sultani had no butchering or grocery experience. He relied on the kindness of strangers and his family. When that wasn’t enough, he started driving trucks.
    Mohammad stands before his truck, that he calls a good friend, which provided the essential capital from driving four years cross country to provide the funds to open Bamyan Halal Meat international grocery market in Columbia.
    How a Black-owned tequila brand is bringing family spirit to Maryland
    Brothers Donta and William Henson launched the Black-owned Los Hermanos 1978 Tequila during COVID-19.
    Donta Henson poses for a portrait with his tequila, Los Hermanos 1978 Tequila, at Lighthouse Canton, on July 3, 2024.
    Baltimore County leaves millions on the table every year in development fees. The council is changing that.
    Baltimore County Council members voted unanimously Monday night to increase impact fees on developers in hopes of collecting more revenue that can be used for schools and roads.
    Baltimore County Council members met to discuss a proposed plastic bag ban on January 31, 2023.
    Baltimore County Council overturns Olszewski’s veto, passes school overcrowding bill
    The Baltimore County Council voted 5-1, with one member absent, to pass a measure that seeks to ease school overcrowding, overriding a veto by County Executive Johnny Olszewski Jr., a Democrat.
    6/16/22—Signs reading “Baltimore County Maryland” and “Baltimore County Council” hang on the wall inside the historic Baltimore County Courthouse in Towson, the center of county government.
    Crowd Fund Baltimore is new, but it’s already scored some wins for small businesses
    Crowd Fund Baltimore, the first crowdfunding platform for Maryland small businesses, kicked off in February and has already helped a Montgomery County Black-owned wine company and a Venezuelan restaurant in Baltimore raise money for expansion plans.
    Jon’ll Boyd (left) and Matthew (right) Boyd are the founders of Boyd Cru Wines, the first Black family-owned wine company in Maryland. Also pictured are their sons.
    The long road ahead for Baltimore’s revived Red Line
    Gov. Wes Moore and other officials gathered Friday to celebrate a decision to build a light rail line to connect East and West Baltimore. But officials must decide whether to build a tunnel under downtown and identify funds to cover the $3 billion to $7 billion price tag.
    A man in a suit and tie and a woman in a red suit stand next to a poster board that reads "RED LINE" with a train symbol in between the two words.
    Contractor alleges Chasen Cos. owes almost $1 million for Meyer Seed Co. project
    In court documents filed on April 15 but not previously available in Baltimore Circuit Court, Patriot Steel Fabrication Inc., a firm based in Church Creek, Dorchester County, asserts that Chasen Cos. owes the business more than $915,000.
    A view from the entryway of a construction site that will become The Whitney, on South Caroline Street in Fells Point.
    Want to live near a Metro station? MDOT wants to build hundreds of apartments near one
    The Maryland Department of Transportation wants to turn a parking lot near the Reisterstown Metro station into apartments, offices and retail shops.
    A 3D, aerial rendering of a complex of apartment buildings surrounded by trees and next to a train line.
    Baltimore targets beverage giants, other companies in lawsuit over plastic waste
    City officials and their lawyers claim global beverage giants PepsiCo and Coca-Cola, along with six other companies, used deceptive business practices and created a public nuisance, while causing harm to people’s health and the environment, according to a lawsuit filed late last week.
    Bottles of Coca-Cola products including Diet Coke are displayed on a store shelf on July 14, 2023 in New York City.
    Baltimore’s flashiest developer wanted to expand nationally. Now he’s rethinking everything.
    Brandon Chasen’s development company is dialing back its national expansion plans and slowing its pace in Baltimore, too.
    Real estate developer Brandon Chasen is photographed during an interview at his company’s office building in Fells Point on May 30, 2024.
    Harborplace gets a reduction as Hooters closes for good
    Hooters, a Harborplace institution, closed with little warning this week despite being the longest-tenured restaurant in the Baltimore’s Inner Harbor.
    Hooters, the longest-tenured restaurant in Harborplace, has closed.
    Black owners breathe new life into Belair-Edison business district
    A focus on the customer and the community is helping new Belair Road businesses overcome long-standing obstacles.
    Belair-Edison business district (Robert Stewart/Capital News Service)
    A historic Black community in Baltimore cements its legacy on a new roadside marker
    State agencies and the Morgan Park Improvement Association hosted a dedication ceremony on Wednesday to unveil a new historical marker along East Cold Spring Lane that commemorates the founding of Morgan Park.
    Jessica Jackson, a Morgan Park Improvement Association history executive board member and resident, unveils a new Marker commemorating the historic neighborhood with her daughters Madison Morgan, 13, and Kennedy Rose Jackson, 6.
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