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Hooked on Medical Office

Carl Ohly was a young Atlanta accountant looking for a business to invest in back in 1972 when a friend told him about a medical office building project that had run aground in mid-construction. The building was far from completion, but it had commitments from physician tenants to occupy 70% of the space for 10 years. The numbers snapped Ohly to attention. The project was past its break-even point and had no chance of failing unless a whole cadre of doctors somehow lost malpractice lawsuits all at once. Under Ohly's fresh stewardship, the building was completed and fully ...

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