You are reading

H&R Block to move back into its old Queens Blvd Location

H&R

July 18, 2016 Staff Report

H&R Block is opening an office at the very same Queens Blvd location that it permanently closed in April.

Nelson Yadgarov, who was in charge of finding a tenant for the 44-03 Queens Blvd space, said that H&R Block signed the lease for 1,500 square foot space that had been listed at $6,300.

He said that H&R Block notified the building owner that it wanted the space and the deal was done.

H&R Block has 12,000 company-owned and franchise retail locations throughout the nation.

Yadgarov was unsure whether the Queens Boulevard location will be managed by the same H&R Block people as previously.

email the author: news@queenspost.com

6 Comments

Click for Comments 
4112

How is is stupid? Tax preparer moves out in April, doesn’t have to pay $6300 all summer….and they’re stupid?

Reply
Mac

-Some market manipulation by greedy landlords and a real estate firm to jack the rent and ultimately all of our cost to do business. Yeah isn’t capitalism great you gullible suckers…..

Reply
SuperWittySmitty

You sound like you’re on the verge of announcing a system that is new and improved and that will be embraced by everyone. I can’t wait to hear it!

Reply
Mac

-super Wrong, I’m just pointing out industry practice. It’s all hypocrisy I know I perpetrated it. Ask your friends who have ever bid on a property that nobody had bid on for years and they all strangely end up in a bidding war with the phantom bidder. Hahaha

Reply

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Silvercup Studios partners with local schools to foster next-generation filmmakers in Queens

Long before it was one of the fastest growing neighborhoods in the nation, Long Island City was an industrial town along the polluted East River, where generations recall the only good smell emanated from the Gordon Baking Company producing the Silvercup brand of bread.

After it was shuttered in a bitter labor dispute in the mid-70s, nearby factory owner Harry Suna of Kew Gardens purchased the property at 42-25 21 St. in 1980, and his architect sons Stuart and Alan began drawing up the plans to repurpose the property into Silvercup Studios, which launched in 1983 and rapidly became one of New York City’s largest film and production facilities, with nearly a half million square feet of studio space and 19 sound stages.

Former Flushing attorney sentenced for stealing millions from real estate clients in the Korean-American community: Feds

A disbarred Flushing-based attorney was sentenced in Brooklyn federal court last week to four-and-a-half years in prison for defrauding his real estate clients in the Korean-American community out of millions of dollars.

Hyun W. Lee, 51, also known as “Michael Lee,” of Closter, in Bergen County, New Jersey, pleaded guilty on Dec. 1 to wire fraud in connection with a scheme to defraud his real estate clients and their counterparties of funds held in his attorney escrow account.