As the city's innovation districts reshape neighborhoods from Navy Yard to Dupont Circle, here's what residents should know about rising rents, new jobs, and changing communities.
Rising labor costs, shifting consumer spending patterns, and downtown foot traffic challenges are reshaping the economics of doing business in Washington's hospitality sector.
As remote work reshapes demand and conversion projects reshape supply, commercial property players are recalibrating strategies across Downtown, Navy Yard, and emerging submarkets.
With international tensions spiking from the Middle East to Africa, Washington employers are scrambling to fill specialized roles—and paying more than ever.
Trade disruptions rippling from Iran negotiations to Congo's health crisis are forcing local manufacturers and service providers to rethink supply chains and market strategies.
As companies return to downtown Washington, a narrow band of property owners in high-demand neighborhoods are capturing outsized gains while vacancy plagues secondary markets.
Record visitor numbers are forcing hotels, restaurants, and attractions across the capital to compete aggressively for workers—and offering higher wages and benefits that ripple through the broader economy.
From supply chain disruptions to currency volatility, DC entrepreneurs are adapting their business models in real time as geopolitical instability ripples through the capital's diverse commercial corridors.
As rental prices in Washington DC surge past national averages, a new breed of opportunity-spotters is reshaping neighborhoods from Columbia Heights to Navy Yard, while working families face a cost-of-living crisis.
Washington DC's K Street trading firms and import-export companies are rerouting shipments amid Middle East tensions and African supply chain disruptions affecting quarterly forecasts.
Rising geopolitical tensions and economic uncertainty abroad are driving major corporate relocations to the nation's capital, fundamentally altering commercial real estate demand in K Street and beyond.
As major corporations embrace hybrid models, a new generation of independent operators is capturing market share in neighborhoods from Navy Yard to Tenleytown.
Hotel occupancy rates, convention bookings, and real estate investment paint a clear picture of Washington's post-pandemic visitor economy renaissance.