Hip, Artsy Heart Beats In Sacramento’s Midtown: ‘Grid’ Turning Into THE Place To Hang Out
It used to be the most you could say about Sacramento’s midtown was that it has pleasant, tree-canopied streets and…
It used to be the most you could say about Sacramento’s midtown was that it has pleasant, tree-canopied streets and…
By Michael J. Heller The Sacramento Bee When I graduated from Jesuit High School in 1982, I could not wait to get out of town. I was frustrated. I needed to experience life beyond the safe and boring confines of my hometown. Growing up, I was very fortunate to have parents who exposed me to…
By Leigh Grogan The Sacramento Bee The new brownstones, lofts, townhomes and condos bring big city design to Sacramento’s urban core. Looking at the details of the new Sutter Brownstones, you could see yourself in Brooklyn. But step back, and your sights are set on midtown Sacramento. It’s where suburbanites become urbanites. Trading cars for…
By Elaine Corn Sacramento Magazine Four people, four lifestyles, four ways to live downtown. Here’s a quartet of people enjoying city life in Sacramento’s new downtown. Bragging about how little they drive, how much they walk and that they’ve got more places to eat and hang out than anyone else, they say they love living…
Press, Projects, Sutter Brownstones
by Bob Shallit Sacramento Bee Lots of people are kicking the tires at midtown’s newest housing complex. “More than 100 people a week are stopping by,” says Mollie Nelson, chief marketer for Sutter Brownstones, a 28-home complex on the 2600 block of N Street. But how about sales? “Fantastic, especially in this market,” she says.…
By Robert Celaschi Sacramento Business Journal The judging team didn’t have to compromise in choosing the MARRS Building for Project of the Year. “Everyone said ‘I wish we had more projects like that,’” said judge Adam Nelson. “We could have spent an entire day just walking around and looking at it. I felt lucky to…
Comstock’s Business Magazine The First 50 Years. In 1945, a young engineer named Mike Heller came to Sacramento to start Continental Heller Construction. Heller was drawn to Sacramento because the economy had remained stable even through the Great Depression. It was also the heart of state government, which had a policy of competitive bidding on…