Rachel Rodgers
Europe Guide 2024
Band 4 : Real Estate
Email address
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+353 1 470 6675Share profile
Band 4
About
Provided by Rachel Rodgers
Practice Areas
Rachel is based in our Dublin office where she is partner and head of the real estate team.
Rachel advises a broad spectrum of clients including financial institutions, asset managers and investors, as well as developers, insolvency practitioners, blue chip companies, charities and state bodies.
Rachel has particular experience in the acquisition, sale and financing of industrial buildings, warehouses, shopping centres, hotels and licensed premises. Rachel acts on behalf of both buyers and sellers of real estate portfolios and is very experienced in the area of commercial leasing, both from the perspective of landlord and tenant.
Career
Before joining Walkers, Rachel was a partner in a top 10 Dublin law firm.
Chambers Review
Europe
Rachel Rodgers of Walkers handles a broad range of real estate transactional mandates. She assists with the disposal of residential projects and has experience in high-value logistics sector acquisitions carried out by international investors.
Contributions
Latest contributions provided by Rachel Rodgers
Strengths
Provided by Chambers
"Rachel Rodgers is meticulous, she draws our attention to areas we would not have been aware of and she is also commercially minded."
"Rachel Rodgers is meticulous, she draws our attention to areas we would not have been aware of and she is also commercially minded."
Articles, highlights and press releases
1 item provided by Walkers
Commercial Leases - Practical considerations when exercising a break option
Given the pressure that the current crisis is placing on businesses in most sectors it is likely that companies are reviewing cash flow and outgoings. We expect most businesses are reviewing spending and considering where costs might be reduced. An obvious and substantial cost is going to be rent pa
Commercial Leases - Practical considerations when exercising a break option
Given the pressure that the current crisis is placing on businesses in most sectors it is likely that companies are reviewing cash flow and outgoings. We expect most businesses are reviewing spending and considering where costs might be reduced. An obvious and substantial cost is going to be rent pa