Our hands-on, multi-disciplinary team will guide you through the increasing complexities of today’s global property market.
An impact of the increasing global appetite for real estate assets is that property transactions are becoming ever more complicated, structurally and financially. Our international scope combined with local expertise on the ground qualify us to handle and complete a multitude of complex cross-border real estate transactions.
Our multi-disciplinary team has a hands-on approach that gives you finely tuned commercially-focused advice for every stage of the property lifecycle including site assembly, planning, construction, project development, financing, sale and purchase, leasing and investment. And with a wide understanding of the real estate market, our restructuring and dispute resolution lawyers can expertly steer you through commercial difficulty or economic downturn.
We represent owners, developers, landlords, tenants, lenders and investors including private equity, REITs and borrowers across all segments of the real estate market, from office, retail, hotels and hospitality to logistics and mixed-use.
In addition to standalone real estate mandates, we add particular value to infrastructure projects across the energy and transport sectors, regularly advising on the real estate aspects of large, multi-faceted projects through a combination of our technical expertise and industry knowledge.
Click the button below to read more about how we are supporting sustainability in the real estate sector.
In Commercial Disputes Weekly we look at two landlord and tenant cases (on notices and the surrender of a sub-lease), a decision on security for costs against a trustee in bankruptcy and statutory interpretation where the provision was enacted following an EU directive.
This week Commercial Disputes Weekly looks at a decision as to whether a contract of carriage can spring up in a receipt bill of lading after novation of the charterparty.
This week we consider the impact of an arbitration award on limitation defences and whether planning status should be considered in freehold valuation. We also look at when the court may hand down judgment even after the parties have settled and the ongoing impact of sanctions on dispute resolution.