Roger Vincent covers commercial real estate for the Los Angeles Times. He is a longtime observer of the industry who served as the first real estate columnist at the Los Angeles Business Journal in the mid-1980s. He was also founding editor of the California Real Estate Journal. He has been with The Times since 1996.
Latest From This Author
As artificial intelligence and cloud storage hoover up more and more space on the nation’s computer servers, real estate developers are racing to build new data centers or convert existing buildings to data uses.
Sept. 27, 2024
One of Malibu’s two mobile home parks sells for nearly $200 million to one of the nation’s largest owners of manufactured housing communities.
Sept. 19, 2024
Construction of a new high-rise addition to the Hilton hotel in Universal City was approved by the Los Angeles Planning Commission, clearing a major hurdle for the long-planned expansion.
Sept. 18, 2024
SoCalGas will leave its namesake Gas Company Tower in downtown L.A. and move a block north to another skyscraper, at 350 S. Grand Ave.
Sept. 11, 2024
A new high-rise complex that would transform a key intersection in Hollywood may get a different look as developers contemplate making it mainly apartments instead of offices.
Sept. 10, 2024
Was the decision to block an affordable housing project NIMBYism run amok in swanky Beverly Hills or the reasonable decision of city officials acting in good faith?
Sept. 4, 2024
Rancho Palos Verdes issued an evacuation warning for the Portuguese Bend area Saturday a little after 3 p.m., citing the impending loss of power.
Sept. 1, 2024
The reincarnation of the former Westside Pavilion mall as a UCLA research center got a major boost from billionaire Gary Michelson and his wife, Alya.
Aug. 27, 2024
A century-old orange grove in Tarzana appears on its way to becoming the site of luxury homes, a transformation that would mark the end of commercial citrus farming in the San Fernando Valley.
Aug. 22, 2024
Olvídense de los grafitis. Los rascacielos más famosos de Los Ángeles tienen un problema mucho mayor
Los artistas del grafiti hicieron famosa a Oceanwide Plaza en el centro de Los Ángeles. Pero una pregunta mucho más compleja se cierne sobre la catástrofe inmobiliaria: ¿se podrá salvar?
Aug. 10, 2024