The commercial real estate world is a constant state of assessing risk, creating investment strategies, and avoiding liability—your first steps could determine how you move forward with your transaction. In any transaction, you should decide what your appetite for risk is—are you comfortable doing your basic due diligence or do you want to dig deeper and have a plan to resolve what could possibly be uncovered? What are the liabilities associated with not pushing further into the remedial process past the initial assessment process? Does conducting a Phase I satisfy the buyer’s requirement for a limitation of liability under that state’s environmental liability law?
What are they?
If you’ve ever done even a single commercial real estate deal, you are familiar with a Phase I Assessment (PI) and the importance of conducting it before buying or selling a property. In order to get a full picture of the property before you sign on the dotted line, a typical Phase I will include a site visit, research of historical records, maps, and directories, and review permitting and zoning for your property. In the State of New Jersey a Preliminary Assessment (PA) can, and should, be done in lieu of a Phase I.
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March 24, 2026
As PFAS continue to reshape the construction risk landscape, lenders that proactively integrate PFAS considerations into underwriting, due diligence, and loan structuring are better positioned to manage uncertainty and protect collateral value.

March 11, 2026
In this Globe St. article, Brett Hayes discusses how sellers who complete due diligence before going to market can reduce re-trades and keep deals moving forward.

October 22, 2025
For commercial real estate professionals, California Assembly Bill 130 (AB 130 Housing) represents a tangible win for project efficiency and investment confidence. By streamlining the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) process, the legislation helps remove long-standing entitlement delays that have historically slowed housing development and constrained capital deployment. The result is faster approvals, clearer timelines, and greater predictability in project execution — key advantages for developers, lenders, and investors delivering much needed housing stock in the region.




