Thanks, Laura. Good morning, and thank you for joining us today as we review our third quarter 2025 results. In addition to Laura, on the line with me this morning are George Wells, our Chief Operating Officer; Chris Kollme, our EVP of Investments; and Sherry Rexroad, our Chief Financial Officer. We also have the usual full complement of our management team available to answer your questions. After nearly 4 years of steady losses, U.S. office demand turned around in the third quarter. According to CoStar's data, about 12 million more square feet of office space was occupied than returned to landlords in the third quarter, the first positive figure since late 2021. More impressive was that it was also the largest total since the second quarter of 2019. The broader leasing data continues to validate what Piedmont has been experiencing on the ground. Pent-up demand is resulting in record levels of leasing across the Piedmont portfolio. In fact, 5 of our operating markets experienced positive absorption with Washington, D.C. and Boston being the exceptions. In addition, new tenant leasing velocity has materially strengthened in 2025. The third quarter's total square footage leased on new agreements in the United States, excluding renewals, is estimated to have reached about 105 million square feet and is now within 10% of the 2015 to 2019 national quarterly average of about 115 million square feet. No doubt, after a challenging 4 years, the office sector is turning the corner. One explanation for this sector shift is a surge in large tenant leasing. The limited availability of large blocks of premium space typically sought by major occupiers and corporate tenants is accelerating the decision-making process. Despite generally slow hiring and an uncertain economic outlook, the upward trend in leasing volume signals that tenants still have a strong appetite for office space. With the supply pipeline contracting and prime availability is becoming scarce, more demand continues to chase a rapidly reducing supply landscape. According to JLL, the cycle of footprint reductions is tapering off as today's users of over 25,000 square feet are cutting just 2.2% of their footprint at renewal. Inventory for high-quality space, either new or renovated is increasingly scarce and office construction has been reduced by an additional 20% from the second quarter with new supply not a factor in most of our markets. These market dynamics have limited high-quality supply and growing demand are allowing Piedmont to materially increase rental rates across its portfolio. And with asking rents still ranging from 25% to 40% below the rates required for new construction, we believe existing high-quality office has a long, long runway for rental rate growth. Within the Piedmont portfolio, which comprises newly renovated, highly amenitized buildings paired with our hospitality-driven service model, we are experiencing multiple tenants competing for full floor spaces, providing the backdrop for Piedmont to increase rental rates at our projects by as much as 20% during the year. By way of example, at our Galleria on the Park project in Atlanta, we executed our first $40 per square foot gross rental rate at the end of 2024. In this quarter, we completed numerous transactions in the mid-40s and have increased rents now to $48 per square foot. Across our portfolio, our hospitality-driven environments have allowed us to increase rental rates to such an extent that we now estimate that more than half the portfolio's in-place rents are at least 20% below market. Our strategy to strengthen the Piedmont brand within the tenant community as the landlord of choice is driving more than our fair share of leasing demand, and it's been reflected in our transaction volumes. Having now leased over 10% of the portfolio over the last 2 quarters, more than 1/3 of the portfolio in the last 2 years and an astounding 80% of the portfolio since the beginning of 2020, equating to almost 12 million square feet since the pandemic. Delving into the numbers, we are thrilled with our third quarter results, exceeding consensus FFO by 3% and achieving record levels of leasing. Most exciting is that all the leasing the team has accomplished this year is positioning Piedmont for sustainable earnings growth. Our backlog of uncommenced leases have reached almost $40 million on an annualized basis and substantially all of those leases will commence by the end of 2026. Piedmont executed approximately 724,000 square feet of total leasing during the quarter, including over 0.5 million square feet of new tenant leases. This new tenant leasing represents the largest amount of new tenant leasing we've completed in a single quarter in over a decade and brings our total year-to-date leasing to approximately 1.8 million square feet. Importantly, over 900,000 square feet of our 2025 new leasing relates to currently vacant space, and it's likely this number will reach over 1 million square feet by the end of the year. That level of absorption equates to $0.10 to $0.15 per share of incremental annualized earnings, an indication of the growth we believe our portfolio is poised to experience. Of note, the 3 largest leases completed during the third quarter related to our out-of-service Minneapolis portfolio, where we're experiencing incredible demand, as George will talk more about in a moment. Our leasing success during the third quarter pushed our in-service lease percentage up another 50 basis points quarter-over-quarter now to 89.2%, bolstering our confidence in achieving our year-end goal of 89% to 90% leased. While not reflected in our lease percentage, our out-of-service portfolio, again, comprised of 2 projects in Minneapolis and 1 in Orlando has experienced astounding market receptivity as differentiated amenitized workplaces continue to garner the majority of leasing in the market. At the end of third quarter, Piedmont's out-of-service portfolio stood at over 50% leased and is approaching 70% leased, including those that are in legal stage today. We couldn't be more excited that the leasing pipeline and continued tenant demand for our buildings positions both the in-service and out-of-service portfolios to achieve 90% leased next year. Furthermore, we anticipate the out-of-service assets will reach stabilization by the end of 2026. In addition to the overall volume, third quarter leasing, as expected, resulted in favorable economics with rental rates for space vacant less than a year, reflecting almost 9% and just over 20% roll-ups on a cash and accrual basis, respectively. In fact, as a result of the repositioning of the portfolio, in the past 2 years, Piedmont leased over 5 million square feet with rental rate roll-ups of approximately 9% and 17% on a cash and accrual basis, respectively. Finally, cash basis same-store NOI also turned positive this quarter as some previously executed leases began to reach the end of their abatement period. With over $35 million of annualized revenue currently in abatement and due to start paying cash in 2026, we expect same-store cash metrics to continue to improve. As George will touch on, leasing momentum remains strong, including over 150,000 square feet of leases signed during the month of October and a robust pipeline with approximately 400,000 square feet currently in the legal stage. I cannot emphasize enough that the broader macro factors, along with our successful portfolio repositioning and elevated service model has and should continue to drive Piedmont's ability to grow FFO organically. We're still on track to meet or exceed our 2025 financial and operational goals with confidence in our ability to deliver mid-single-digit FFO growth or better in 2026 and 2027. Before I hand the call over to George, I want to mention that we have once again achieved a 5-star rating and Green Star recognition from GRESB, placing us in the top decile of all participating listed U.S. companies for this prestigious recognition. I hope that you'll take a moment to review our recently published corporate responsibility report, highlighting the team's hard work and many accomplishments that went to achieving this record. The report is available on our website under the Corporate Responsibility section. With that, I will now hand the call over to George, who will go into more details on the leasing pipeline and third quarter operational results.