About the ULI Senior Resident Fellows
The ULI senior resident fellows program was established to enhance the Institute's role as the most influential voice in the real estate industry, and raise awareness of its mission to improve the quality of land use and development worldwide. ULI has seven senior resident fellows who specialize in public policy, retail/urban entertainment, transportation/infrastructure, housing, real estate finance, environmental issues, and urban development.
Recent Fellows Publications
Process before Place MakingCreation of a mixture of uses in an integrated development often faces significant challenges.
Great Places, Great Parking?Correcting just a few mistakes can make parking subordinate to development, supporting a great place.
There Goes the SkylineThe issue of tall buildings in historic settings is not a small one. While very tall buildings have a place, that place is not every place.
Workforce Housing and Climate ChangeThe location of workforce housing—and all types of housing—is critical to planning how land is used in light of climate change and global warming. It is key to designing the compact communities needed to reduce the greenhouse gases emitted every day in the United States from the built environment and from the vehicle miles traveled (VMT) due to low-density development.
A Simple AnalogyYou can price risk . . . you cannot price uncertainty.
Beyond LifestyleIn the January issue of
Urban Land, ULI Senior Resident Fellow Michael Beyard discusses the illusive definition of lifestyle centers.
Greening the SuburbsFor the immediate future, the question is not whether suburbs will grow, but how.
A National Dialogue on TransportationULI Senior Resident Fellow Robert Dunphy discusses proposals made to Congress for creating and sustaining a surface transportation system in the United States to serve the country for the next 50 years.
Housing Challenges in an Urban WorldThe challenge and opportunity for the private sector is to provide millions of new moderately priced urban homes.
Cities in a SqueezeCities are looking for ways to forge a viable partnership with the federal government.