Legal teams at real estate & infrastructure companies must adapt to a fast-moving environment to best serve business interests and ensure viability.
To be successful in real estate, construction, development, and building products, legal teams need to be able to adapt to a fast-moving environment to ensure viability.
Multiple parties to litigation – from insurers, financiers, engineers, federal and local governments, and multijurisdictional regulatory bodies – further complicate the legal landscape.
Legility has real estate, construction, and building products experience across the Americas, Europe, and Asia:
Proprietary technology for handling real estate data
Forensic analysis across diverse data types
Lease contract abstraction
Deep experience in challenging data types
Infrastructure analytics
Mergers & acquisitions
Legal operations optimization
eDiscovery analytics
Managed legal review
The legal landscape in the real estate, infrastructure, construction, and building products involves high data volumes, complex and mobile data sources, tight timelines, organizational complexity, and cross-border privacy and regulatory challenges.
We work with the world’s leading construction, real estate, and building products organizations and their outside counsel to consistently achieve positive legal outcomes across favorable and unfavorable economic environments.
How we helped a client provide potential buyers with legal data for 6K+ real property parcels.
How Legility’s Legal Hold Repository saved a construction company time, money, and energy while reducing its legal risk exposure and meeting its discovery and litigation obligations.
Economic uncertainty is requiring the general counsel to reimagine the future of their legal departments.
How we helped a client provide potential buyers with legal data for 6K+ real property parcels.
How Legility’s Legal Hold Repository saved a construction company time, money, and energy while reducing its legal risk exposure and meeting its discovery and litigation obligations.
Economic uncertainty is requiring the general counsel to reimagine the future of their legal departments.