Thanks, Francisco. So this is a slide that draws the most questions and comments. So I'll dwell on it for a few minutes before we go on with the rest of the presentation and just highlight a few things that we've added. So what you see on the right is our growing map of Sky Harbor ground leases, self-explanatory. The two new ground leases that you see are in the Pacific Northwest. That's Seattle and Portland. The chart on the left is, I think, maybe the key chart to understand in terms of how we perceive or conceive of value creation at Sky Harbor, which is the chart that tracks the revenue that is available to Sky Harbor. And we added a few points just to make sure that people understand, because we've gotten questions about this on the last two or three earnings calls. The first is what does that bar chart actually represent? It's rentable square footage under ground lease times Sky Harbor equivalent rent. Okay, airport, sorry, rentable square footage under ground lease times Sky Harbor equivalent rent. That is the total revenue that's available to Sky Harbor from ground leases that we currently control. The box on the upper left is a direct answer to a lot of people's questions from previous calls. How do we calculate that and why do we think it's a conservative starting point for estimating kind of call it terminal NOI in the entire Sky Harbor portfolio? Sky Harbor equivalent rent is what people are paying today at those airports. Now, the closest function that we have to compare it to is the original CBRE estimate from 2022 on available rent on the airfield that we had. So what we're looking at here is $29.08. That was the original estimate. That is what we went out to the bond market with originally. That was for 2022. And we're looking at three airports there. That's Sugar Land in Houston, Opa-Locka in Miami and Nashville International in Nashville. Where we are currently is at $35.75 a square foot. So that is the actual. It's about twenty three percent higher than the Sky Harbor equivalent rent, which is half of the reason, that we feel that this chart is conservative. What we see on the lowest line is the highest expected revenue, which is forty dollars and six cents. That is a blended average of the most recent leases signed in Miami, Nashville and Houston, which represents a 38% premium over the original CBRE estimate. So there's two things that we feel are going on here. The first is the premium that top jet owners in the country are willing to pay for the home basing offering. Sky Harbor is a is a completely unique offering in aviation. It doesn't exist today. And we think that that's part of the reason that we're commanding such a premium over Sky Harbor equivalent rents. And the second is inflation on airports, which is a central piece of our thesis, which is we're not building new airports in this country. The available land on existing airports are, let's say, the readily developable land on existing airports is already quite scarce. We tend to take up all of the readily developable land on an airport that we come to. And that that really makes the case. It's really a supply demand question for airport inflation outstripping CPI by a very significant margin. And I think that's part of what we're seeing. So the last line on that chart captures, we believe, a lot of that inflation, meaning the most recent rents that we're seeing are much higher than our average rent. A lease that we signed on the first round right after opening a campus comes in at a lower total revenue than a lease signed more recently, so that's that is on site acquisition. The next slide is just a quick overview of our most recent site acquisition deal. This is Hillsboro, Oregon, which is the primary business aviation airport for Portland. And everybody has the slides, I'm not going to spend much more time on it. Next slide is where we've spent most of our time and effort over the last two quarters, which is in a total revamping of our construction. Sky Harbor is becoming a construction company in many ways, and we have today we have the scale that both I say demands that we do this, but also presents a big opportunity for doing it. So if you look on the left side of the chart. You see the story of vertical integration at Sky Harbor, which largely was not a factor in the early days. We did do our own prototypes very early on, and I think that was a big piece of our value proposition. But almost everything else was outsourced in the construction stack. And what you can see over the course of 2024 where we purchased our pre-engineered metal building manufacturer subsidiary and brought all of our steel and materials procurement in-house. What we've done over the last call it two or three quarters was integrate at the ability to conduct our own pre-construction construction services, design, architecture, engineering and increasingly now, general contracting in-house. So what does what does all that do? And that trend, I believe, will continue as we continue to scale. What does all that do? The center column is the intended effect of those moves. The first for everybody who's looking closely at our unit economics is to manage costs. And that's not just a question of cutting out margin to the various suppliers that used to be on the outside. But it's also getting a lot more efficient in our processes, because, again, we're not relying on people who do a lot of different things. We're now talking about people who do only one thing, which is build the prototype Sky Harbor 37 hangar. That will also manifest in speed, which improves, which lowers our costs as well, and also starts revenues flowing earlier. Now, you know, if you figure about a half a million dollars a month in NOI per campus, the effect of shaving, you know, two, two and a half months off of our construction campus is it certainly moves the needle, even in the grand scheme. Build quality, which, you know, is a lot of people in the call who follow us closely have known we've had a very mixed experience with build quality and design quality in our space. And we've worked with the blue chip suppliers. It just happens that in this space there are quality issues, and that's something that we want to address by taking it in-house. Fundamentally, the ability to manage scale, you know, really inoculate ourselves from the effects of supply chain disruptions or anything like that and have nothing get in the way of scaling our business. And then lastly, versatility. If we need to make modifications to the prototype retrofits, whatever it might be, having all of that ability in-house and the ability to prioritize because, you know, we're not competing with other customers for those services, I think is a big deal. And the ultimate benefit that we're trying to get from this is on the right column. Obviously, our unit economics is yield on cost is what we measure. The denominator is our construction cost. The lower we get those, the better our unit economics. One level more subtle, but I think very important for people who are trying to value this company is our addressable market. If you just do the math, if you're looking at it, you know, if you're trying to target a minimum of a 12% yield on cost in all of our new construction, if you're building at $250 a foot versus $300 a foot, the universe of airports that will bear that yield grows dramatically. The addressable market grows. If we're successful in all of our efforts to reduce our construction costs, the total addressable market grows very significantly for Sky Harbor. And then third, you know, arguably most important is product differentiation. And we have a bundled real estate and service offering that has to go together. You have to build it this way in order to put forward the service offering that we have. We aim to be the six star offering always in our space, and we're differentiating ourselves on build quality. It's not just it's not just about the quality of construction and the durability of our structures, but it's the design itself. And the fact that we have a rapid feedback loop where you solicit direct feedback from our residents and then introduce that into the portfolio. I think we continue to gain an advantage, and that will increasingly be part of the moat around this entire business. With that, I'm going to hand it over to Tim.