Other News
When “Bear Swamp Repo” starts airing this summer, it will be the latest New Jersey-based reality television show aiming for the national limelight that’s made the state a darling of the genre, with “Jersey Shore,” “Cake Boss” and “Real Housewives” among its credits.
Working out of a mostly empty office in Florham Park, pharmaceutical industry veteran John Incledon is eager to hire new people to fill up that space.
Boston Properties Inc. announced last week it has agreed to sell its Carnegie Center portfolio, located in Princeton, to a joint venture between Morristown-based Normandy Real Estate Partners and the Landis Group, developer of the Class A office park, for about $468 million.
A global mattress company with Princeton headquarters is achieving double-digit sales growth by targeting the mid-priced core of the bedding market, where consumers shop for bargains to stretch their buying power.
During Joshua Zinder’s 20 years as an architect, he has designed for almost every type of building — from restaurants and medical facilities to prisons — which has made it rather difficult for him to create one style of design.
The newest chamber of commerce in Trenton is really just an updated version of an older one. The Capital Region Minority Chamber of Commerce is being born out of the ashes of the old Metropolitan Trenton African-American Chamber of Commerce.
Administrative law judges in New Jersey have degrees, hold hearings and issues decisions, just like other judges.
The world’s unquenchable thirst for water is driving a growth spurt at Niagara Conservation, of Hanover’s Cedar Knolls section. The company’s water-saving shower heads are found in bathrooms from Saudi Arabia to Los Angeles.
Thirteen New Jersey companies got a total of $155.7 million of venture funding in the first quarter of 2011, according to the MoneyTree Report from PricewaterhouseCoopers and the National Venture Capital Association. The report is based on data provided by Thomson Reuters.
When businesses run into trouble, they can reliably turn to their local chambers of commerce for resources and support.
And when a fire nearly destroyed the Hunterdon County Chamber of Commerce’s office, its officers found sometimes, that’s a two-way street.
And when a fire nearly destroyed the Hunterdon County Chamber of Commerce’s office, its officers found sometimes, that’s a two-way street.
The borough of Flemington hopes the creation of a business improvement district will offset a downtown in decline, with retail vacancy rates hovering at about 40 percent since the closure of two local tourist destinations.
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