A proposal to add a swimming pool and pavilion to the late Alan Bond's Dalkeith mansion has caused planners and lawyers to lock horns at a Nedlands council meeting.
One of Perth's most infamous restaurants and the former electorate office of long-time Curtin MP Julie Bishop is now poised to become a six-storey apartment complex.
The state's former chief justice has spoken out about the overrepresentation of Aboriginal people in the justice system and the role he believes sport could have in rectifying that.
The state government has confirmed it is in talks to reach a settlement that would end the long-standing dispute over the $1.7 billion of litigation proceeds from Alan Bond's failed Bell Group.
Whether Premier Colin Barnett stays or goes is a political decision, but it would be unwise for anyone to imagine that a change at the top of government will not have a significant effect on the way business is conducted in Western Australia.
The High Court has dealt a major blow to the state government after ruling invalid legislation that would have propelled it to the top of the creditors' list for the $1.75 billion carve-up of the failed Bell Group.
Mining and debt have always been a deadly combination, especially for investors, but toss in a stiff dose of politics and you have a brew infinitely more volatile for everyone, including government.
A New Zealand-based insolvency expert has been put in charge of a new state government authority that will decide how $1.7 billion from the Bell Group litigation will be distributed.
Making sure all parties are happy with the allocation of seating at the new sports stadium will require some nimble footwork by the Barnett government.
Treasurer Mike Nahan has defended legislation he introduced to end the long-running $1.7 billion Bell Group legal story after it was criticised by the Australian and Western Australian bar associations.
Kerry Stokes is one of Australia's wealthiest and most private business leaders, but that has changed with the release of two biographies in two years. However conspicuous gaps in what we know about his deals and erstwhile partners remain.
A contentious $30 million, 125-apartment plan at the old bottleyard site on Palmerston Street on the outskirts of Northbridge is set to get the green light from the Metropolitan West Development As
The recent publication of two listings of influential business leaders provided food for thought about the growing international influence on Western Australia.
When Bob Williams gazes across the Perth city skyline to the CBD's western-most high rise building he is clearly still enthralled with the structure that marks the high and low point for his construction career.
The Singaporean owners of Scarborough's iconic Rendezvous Observation City want to redevelop the 18-storey tower into a luxury residential apartment block in a $100 million plan that includes a new, eight-level, five-star hotel on the site.