Overview
Though it can get a little messy at times, Amanda genuinely enjoys the adventure of baking with her son Jonah and is sure that her daughter Hazel will soon be a lively addition to the process.
Amanda chairs the firm’s Real Estate Industry Group, which houses the firm’s real estate transactions and real estate finance practice groups.
Amanda’s assists clients with the acquisition, sale, and leasing of real property. She advises clients in all aspects of real estate due diligence, including title and survey review, site plan approval, and use and development considerations. She is an experienced author and negotiator of purchase contracts, leases, easements, restrictive covenants, title cure documents, and other instruments connected with the transfer and use of commercial real estate. She also serves as local counsel for real estate transactions based in Ohio and Kentucky.
Amanda enjoys partnering with clients to develop processes and standards for managing and scaling a portfolios of real estate assets. She is proud to represent a number of national and regional restaurant and hospitality clients in the drafting, negotiation, and management of their commercial leases.
Amanda is a graduate of Hanover College and the University of Cincinnati. She lives a charmed life in a blissfully chaotic home in Covington with her husband, David, and three young kids.
Industries & Practices
Education
Hanover College, B.A., magna cum laude, English Literature
University of Cincinnati College of Law, J.D., magna cum laude, 2009
Distinctions
Leadership Northern Kentucky - Class of 2022
Super Lawyers Rising Star - 2018
Cincinnati Business Courier - Forty Under 40
Professional Activities
Cincinnati Youth Collaborative Board Member – 2015-present
YWCA Rising Star Committee Member – 2015-2018
YWCA Rising Star Leadership - 2014 Graduate
Insights
Resource Centers
Outside The Office
Amanda Penick weighs her words.
Amanda is the third of four in her family. Her mother is an operating room nurse at Christ Hospital. She also oversees the food pantry at Holy Family Church in Price Hill and was Amanda’s Girl Scout troop leader.
"She still mends our clothing. If I have a button missing, she notices it before I do and stitches it back on." From her mother’s giving example, Amanda recognizes she leads a fortunate life, one she does not take for granted, one that requires her to give back.
On the evenings when Amanda’s mom was working, her father would read stories from the Bible or Mark Twain to the kids. If they weren’t good that day, their punishment would be no stories that night. So the kids were almost always good. She credits her father with her love of reading and wordplay.
"Words should never be taken lightly," she says. "I’m very conscious of how words can be interpreted or misinterpreted. For me, it’s about communication. I put a lot of thought into the words I choose. It goes against my nature to just dash off an email."
Amanda was a tomboy. She didn’t like dresses and spent long summer days in the woods behind her parent’s home. She loved school, particularly spelling and vocabulary lessons.
"It was a big deal when we would come home with a good report card. We’d throw it down –and Mom and Dad would ooh and ahh. They’d take us out to eat or to the Discovery Zone. The way they would react made us try harder – not for the celebration but because it pleased them so much for us to do well."
At St. Ursula Academy, she was editor of the student newspaper. Her major at Hanover College was English. During an internship with an entertainment law firm in Philadelphia her junior year, she connected with Helen Richardson, an attorney whose influence steered Amanda to law school. "She helped me understand how to integrate humanity into the practice of law, that it’s OK to have a sense of humor. She taught me that it’s not about the billable hour. It’s about the relationship."
Amanda enjoys wading through huge amounts of amorphous information, boiling down complex issues to their basic components. "I want to be the kind of attorney people can rely on to explain complex issues fairly, accurately, simply and honestly. If I don’t think the odds for them are good, I want them to know I will be open and honest and give a fair evaluation. Most of all, I want them to know I truly do have their best interests at heart."
Amanda J. Penick
- office 513.629.2733
- fax 513.651.3836
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312 Walnut StreetSuite 1800Cincinnati, OH 45202 -4152
Admissions
- State of Ohio
- State of New York
- Commonwealth of Kentucky