Nongfu Spring down to a trickle

It’s been a year since a Chinese water and beverage bottling company purchased commercial property in Nashua. Not much more is known now than it was then about the company’s intentions for the 337,391-square-foot building on 23 acres at 80 Northwest Blvd., purchased Jan. 31, 2025 for $67 million by a subsidiary of Nongfu Spring, a giant Chinese bottled water and beverage company.

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NH Business Review Webinar

Join us for a timely and practical webinar that breaks down the fast-changing legal landscape of artificial intelligence and what it means for today’s businesses. As AI becomes more deeply embedded in everyday software and operations, organizations must navigate a regulatory environment that is fragmented, evolving, and often unclear. Designed to cut through complexity, the discussion will help business leaders understand their responsibilities, reduce risk, and turn compliance into a strategic advantage.

Event date: Thursday, January 22, 2026 | 11:00 a.m –12:00 p.m.

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2026 Best of Business Awards

The BOB Awards have assembled an all-star league of business superheroes — and now it’s time to honor this powerhouse lineup with an unforgettable celebration. Join us as we recognize the best businesses in the state, chosen by our readers and the customers who rely on them every day.

Join us in Concord on Thursday, March 12.

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Cook on Concord: 2026 starts with a bang

On the morning of Jan. 3, American air forces executed an extraordinary raid in Caracas, Venezuela, capturing President Nicolas Maduro and his wife in their fortified home, brought them out of the country and ultimately to New York to face charges of drug trafficking.

iLawyer: artificial intelligence and the law

In 2024, computer programmers from DeepMind won the Nobel Prize in chemistry for developing an AI that predicts protein folding. If AI that is advanced enough to simulate protein folding (and allow programmers to win the world’s top chemistry prize) has arrived, is the law any more complicated? Why should lawyers invest time learning about various facets of the law to draft briefs or contracts, when they can task AI?

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