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New Yorks wobbly office market, limping from a record-high 20% vacancy rate and loss of some tenants to lower-tax South Florida, has more competition to worry about: Boca Raton.

The once-sleepy Sunshine State city of 100,000 between Fort Lauderdale and West Palm Beach is surging with new office development and amenities to support it.

Boca Raton is more complex and varied than visitors sometimes glean from its repetitive, gated residential communities, or its old reputation as a retirement town filled with geezers in golf carts. Its Atlantic Ocean waterfront now thrives with luxury condo towers, restaurants and private clubs that draw a younger clientele.

That transformation is most evident in an area now called Midtown, formerly known as the Golden Triangle, which has become the hub of Boca’s growing finance footprint.

The commercial district — bounded by Yamato Road to the north and Palmetto Park Road to the south, and between Interstate 95 to the east and St. Andrews Boulevard to the west — is home to 38 NYSE — and Nasdaq-listed companies.

Leasing at Bocas 13 million square feet of offices topped 525,000 square feet in 2023, easily besting  343,000 square feet in Fort Lauderdale and 126,000 square feet in West Palm Beach.

The momentum continued into 2024 with six new leases at the  Boca Raton Innovation Campus (BRIC), a former IBM facility a short distance from Midtown thats undergoing a $100 million project to transform it into more modern offices, places to eat and entertainment venues.

“We continue to see an influx of cutting-edge companies flocking to South Florida in search of flexible, yet turnkey, workspaces to meet the needs of their employees, BRIC general manager Michael Perrette said.

Several new office buildings that are planned or under construction will bring millions more square feet to market in the next few years.

Prominent among them is Midtown Place, a rising, Class-A project with 120,000 square feet of state-of-the-art offices to open next year. A project of Butters Construction & Development, it will bring south Palm Beach County its first new offices in more than a decade.

An existing building, 2 Town Center, was significantly upgraded by owners CP Group two years ago with such Manhattan-style features as prebuilt floors and hybrid meeting spaces. It boasts its own restaurant row.

CP managing partner Angelo Bianco said its more than 60% leased at $45 per square foot to such firms as BMO Harris Bank, Praedium Group, Prudential Financial, Related Companies and Wells Fargo Advisors.

Companies are drawn by what Boca Raton Economic Development manager Jessica Del Vecchio calls a built-in workforce of educated talent.

Del Vecchio summed up the view of some tenants in the post-pandemic world as, We can keep a presence on Wall Street, but we can also relocate to an area that we want to be in —  thats low taxes.

Boca also boasts a stop on the state’s high-speed Brightline service, allowing Miami residents to cut their commute on traffic-clogged I-95 to under an hour.

Midtown tenants enjoy proximity to the gargantuan Town Center Mall. With no fewer than five busy department stores —  Saks Fifth Avenue, Nordstrom, Neiman Marcus, Bloomingdales and Macys — and hundreds of high-end shops, it has staved off the bricks-and-mortar retail woes in much of the country.

There is also the Brookfield-owned residential and shopping complex Mizner Park, and now — incongruously for a subtropical climate — Boca Ice, a 73,000 square-foot facility with twin, NHL-size skating and hockey rinks.

Boca also has expanded its options for tourists looking to avoid the hassle of South Beach or the exorbitant prices in West Palm Beach.

A major hotel/resort, the Renaissance Boca Raton, operated by TPG Hotels & Resorts, recently emerged from an extensive renovation with a new, 30,000 square-foot pool deck and conference facilities.

We have owned and operated the property since 2006 and have experienced multiple market cycles and economic shifts,” said Ralph V. Izzi Jr., a spokesman for owner, the Procaccianti Companies.

“The current resurgence of Midtown Boca has been remarkable to say the least. Post-COVID demand in leisure and business travel, combined with evolving consumer preferences were key factors in our decision to invest so aggressively in the property.

The Boca eating scene is on an upswing everywhere. 

A large outpost of popular and critically praised steakhouse Meat Market is not owned by the Renaissance but is attached to the hotel and also operates a poolside cocktails-and-snacks bar.    

Meanwhile, New York restaurateur Dean Poll opened a branch of his famed Gallaghers steakhouse last fall. He said he chose the location because its in the middle of the corporate center with millions of square feet of offices. Hotels within a half mile mostly cater to business travelers.

He and partner Ken Langone were so confident, We built two dining areas that are able to be made into private rooms.

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Sources: Stars D Harley secures 8-year extension

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Sources: Stars D Harley secures 8-year extension

Dallas Stars defenseman Thomas Harley has agreed to sign an eight-year extension with the club, a contract that features an average-annual value just below $10.6 million, sources told ESPN’s Emily Kaplan on Tuesday night.

The deal comes with a full no-movement clause past Year Nos. 1-3, and secures a key cog in the Dallas blue line as the Stars seek their first trip to the Stanley Final since 2020.

Harley, 24, a native of Syracuse, N.Y., had one goal and eight points this season, leading into Dallas’ home game against the Washington Capitals on Tuesday night. He skated in 79 and 78 games, respectively, for the Stars the past two seasons, and posted a career-high 50 points last year.

Harley, who was raised in Canada, received the call to join Team Canada earlier this year midway through the 4 Nations Face-Off. He was an injury replacement for Cale Makar, and was with the club when it won the championship game in Boston. In the final, a 3-2 win over Team USA, Harley finished with an assist in 31 shifts that covered 21:56 of ice time.

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Ex-NHL star Kesler faces sexual conduct charges

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Ex-NHL star Kesler faces sexual conduct charges

Former NHL center Ryan Kesler has been charged with criminal sexual conduct in Michigan, according to court records obtained by multiple outlets.

Kesler pleaded not guilty to two misdemeanor counts of fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct Monday in Bloomfield Hills District Court, according to court records.

Kesler posted $50,000 bond and was ordered not to leave the state of Michigan without court permission. His next scheduled court appearance is set for Nov. 6.

Kesler has denied the charges, which were filed last Thursday and stem from an alleged incident on Jan. 1 in Orchard Lake, Michigan, according to court records.

“Ryan emphatically denies the allegations and is completely innocent of the charges,” his attorney Robert Morad told The Athletic on Monday. “As the legal process begins, we ask for respect for his privacy and for the integrity of the judicial system. We are confident, when all the facts and circumstances are presented, that he will be fully exonerated.”

According to the criminal complaint, which was obtained by The Athletic, both counts allege Kesler engaged in sexual contact with a 16-year-old child “through force or coercion and/or (had) reason to know the victim was physically helpless.”

Kesler, 41, has been suspended from his role as a youth hockey coach by the Michigan Amateur Hockey Association (MAHA). Tom Berry, the president of MAHA, told The Athletic that Kesler also has been suspended from all USA Hockey activities. Kesler was in his third season coaching the Detroit-area Little Caesars AAA Hockey Club 15O Bantam Midget team.

Kesler played parts of 15 seasons with the Vancouver Canucks and Anaheim Ducks, appearing in 1,001 regular-season games from 2003 to 2019.

A two-time All-Star, Kesler had 258 goals and 315 assists in his career and won the Selke Award, given to the NHL’s best two-way forward, after the 2010-11 season. The Michigan native also was a member of the United States Olympic teams in 2010 and 2014.

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Fan at Pens game injured in fall from upper level

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Fan at Pens game injured in fall from upper level

PITTSBURGH — A fan at Monday night’s game between the Pittsburgh Penguins and St. Louis Blues was taken to a hospital after falling from the upper concourse at PPG Paints Arena.

The incident happened early in the first period after Anthony Mantha‘s goal gave the Penguins a 2-0 lead.

Emergency personnel treated the fan, a man who was not identified, before taking him to Mercy Hospital, located a few blocks from the arena.

Play was not halted while the man was being treated. Pittsburgh police told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette that the man was in critical condition.

“Our concerns remain with the individual and his family at this time,” the Penguins said in a statement.

Penguins captain Sidney Crosby, who became the ninth player in NHL history to score 1,700 points, said the team found out about the fall after the game.

“It doesn’t feel right to be talking about points when you hear something like that,” Crosby said. “Obviously, our thoughts and prayers are with that person and their family and hopefully they’re OK.”

Penguins coach Dan Muse echoed Crosby’s sentiments.

“We all come here for a sport and a game, and when you hear something like that, it kind of puts everything else aside,” Muse said. “Our thoughts and prayers are with him and his family.”

The fall was the third such incident at a Pittsburgh sporting event this year.

In May, Kavan Markwood fell over the railing atop the 21-foot-high Clemente Wall and onto the field at PNC Park late in a game between the Pittsburgh Pirates and Chicago Cubs. Markwood spent several days in the hospital but recovered. An acquaintance of Markwood was later charged with providing alcohol to Markwood, who was 20 at the time of the incident.

On Saturday night, a worker at Acrisure Stadium, home of the Pittsburgh Steelers, suffered injuries to his legs when he fell approximately 50 feet while doing work near the stadium’s scoreboard.

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