advertising
print page Print  email page Email 


Other Articles

The House That Henrybuilt

A dot-com refugee finds success using his hands


Green Washington Awards

Visit our photo gallery from our first Green Washington Awards banquet. Spot the Senator.


Where the Customer is King

At Moneytree, staff and management are on the same page


Gone to the Dogs

Washington's canine love affair pays the bills for these doggie daycare entrepreneurs


Heavy Metal Mania

Car collectors are drawn to the smooth lines, the storied pasts, the powerful engines ... gas...


The First Declines

The nation continues to flirt with recession, hammered by problems in the financial services...


Hit the Deck

New and unusual options in outdoor dining


A Q&A with Jennifer Sizemore

Jennifer Sizemore is vice president and editor-in-chief of Redmondbased MSNBC.com and an executive...


Learning From the Greats

Leaders come in many forms, but great leaders all have something in common


Recent Company Acquisitions

Demolition company becomes a national player.

Nuprecon, a demolition company based in Snoqualmie, is merging with Brea, Calif.-based CST Environmental to create the second-largest technical demolition company in the United States The new firm will have market reach from the Pacific Northwest and Hawaii down through California and across the South.

The new company will be known as Nuprecon/CST Holdings, but each branch will operate under its own name. The firm is majority-owned by Evergreen Pacific Partners, a Seattlebased private equity firm that owned Nuprecon. Nuprecon president John Hennessy says the merger will allow the combined company to provide a wider variety of services, such as rolling out Nuprecon's ReNu recycling services in CST's markets in the South. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

"Whatever we do here will change the face of Vancouver forever."

David Hansen, project design lead for Ankrom Moisan Associated Architects, about its plans to develop a mixed-use project on the Columbia River.

"It?s a once-in-a-lifetime property? It?s almost bragging rights if you purchase it."

Chris Pardo, who plans to build the 'Trophy Tower,' a 43-story condo building in downtown Seattle with only 19 units priced from $2 million to $18 million.

"I humbly recognize and share both your concern and your disappointment in how the company has performed and how that has affected your investment in Starbucks. I promise you this will not stand."

Starbucks chairman and CEO Howard Schultz at the company?s annual shareholders? meeting.

Comments

Leave a Reply


If you can't read the word, click here.

CAPTCHA image for SPAM prevention

advertising

© Washington CEO Magazine 2008