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HUME DEVELOPMENT. luxury commercial + Residential real estate | hospitality. bel air beverly hills santa monica west hollywood sacramento. VILLA ORLANDO, WEST ...
- Commercial I
La Borgata at Serrano El Dorado Hills, CA An award winning...
- Residential I
300 Stone Canyon Road Bel Air, CA Owned by famed Oscar...
- Profile
Hume Development Inc., an award-winning California real...
- Commercial II
Los Angeles Music & Arts Promenade LAMAP Mixed-Use ....
- Residential III
Estates at Granite Bay Golf Club, CA. Ojai Fireplace...
- Commercial I
View Roger Hume’s profile on LinkedIn, a professional community of 1 billion members. Developer/Builder · Hume Developmnent Inc., an award winning California real estate development ...
- 240
- January 1, 1990
- Hume Development Inc.
- Beverly Hills, California, United States
Feb 17, 2023 · There are times, developer Roger Hume said, when he can hardly believe it's done. Three years of trips between his base in Los Angeles and his project in Midtown Sacramento has given way to ...
- Ben Van Der Meer
- Senior Reporter
- bvandermeer@bizjournals.com
- Sacramento Business Journal
Apr 17, 2024 · Apr 17, 2024. Listen to this article 3 min. A revised application reveals more details on the planned conversion of a 109-year-old Downtown Sacramento office building into a 107-room hotel. Plans ...
- Ben Van Der Meer
- Senior Reporter
- bvandermeer@bizjournals.com
- Sacramento Business Journal
May 13, 2024 · Roger Hume stands near a hallway window at what used to be the Eastern Star Temple. Originally built in the 1920s for $226,000 as a meeting hall for the Order of the Eastern Star, a Masonic body open to women, the temple served various purposes over the years. Sacramento-area students used to come to the temple for high school dances.
Jan 26, 2024 · Developer Roger Hume said he's planning a "must-see" ground-floor restaurant/bar concept as part of his planned adaptive reuse of the office building at 700 J St. into a hotel. The developer ...
The spring afternoon I went there, a crane dangled steel beams high above rooftops, workers delicately handled decorative terra cotta and an energetic Roger Hume bounced around from floor to floor. The frenetic scene belonged to one of the more complex and promising rehabilitation projects in recent Sacramento history.