Downtown’s Dominant Force In Office High-Rises
Southwest Value Partners and downtown San Diego will be united for many years to come
  At its grand opening in 1989, Symphony Towers immediately became a leading downtown San Diego landmark. Today, it remains the city’s benchmark for innovative design, quality construction and tenant service.Click Here To Read The Article


Downtown On A Roel
A family-owned business builds a great city.
    In 1964 Roel Construction began a tradition of building in the downtown San Diego area with a project employing the first tower crane ever used in San Diego for the senior housing high-rise, Luther Tower. Since then we’ve built more than 2.3 million square feet of space downtown. Whether it’s pouring concrete, building out tenant improvements or constructing new buildings, Roel has been there and done that. Click Here To Read The Article


The Market Makers
Irving Hughes Creates New Market for Office Leasing Opportunities
    What do you have when you combine San Diego’s most prolific commercial real estate brokers with a major percentage of office-tenant leasing accounts? Click Here To Read The Article


Symphony Towers
San Diego’s Finest Environment
    At its grand opening in 1989, Symphony Towers immediately became a leading downtown San Diego landmark. Today, it remains the city’s benchmark for innovative design, quality construction and tenant service.
    Five years from inception to completion, Symphony Towers is San Diego’s largest private, mixed-use project. It includes a 34-story, Class A office tower; 27-story Marriott Suites Hotel; a five-level parking structure; and an elegantly restored 2,255-seat Copley Symphony Hall. The 1.2-million-square-foot project occupies a full city block. Click Here To Read The Article


High Notes
At The Opera
Season promises Verdi, Floyd,
Wagner, Mozart and Humperdinck

    In 1998, we had many sold-out performances and huge artistic successes with The Barber of Seville, Salome, Madama Butterfly, Romeo And Juliet and The Marriage of Figaro,” said General Director Ian Campbell.

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The Prop. C Q&A
It’s not just a playing field, but a whole neighborhood for living and working

    San Diego voters will be asked Nov. 3 to approve an exciting project that will not just build a ballpark for the Padres, keeping the team in San Diego for the next three decades, but will revitalize a long-neglected portion of Downtown. Here we answer some frequently asked questions.
Question. What is the Ballpark District?

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