Urban Land Institute

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Urban Land Institute

logo
legal form nonprofit organization
founding December 14, 1936
Seat Washington, DC
management Edward Walter, Global CEO
Branch Land use think tank , research institute
Website uli.org

The Urban Land Institute ( ULI for short ) is a non-profit research and educational institution with headquarters in Washington , Hong Kong and London . The self-declared goal is to "assume a leadership role in responsible land use and to create and maintain the development of communities worldwide". The ULI stands for progressive development and research as well as education, including in the areas of maintaining further development, smart growth (urban and transport planning), network development and workforce housing (affordable housing for workers).

The ULI was founded in 1936 and is now represented in over 80 countries worldwide. It has over 42,000 members, of whom over 20% are in government, educational or public corporations, and about 75% are primarily in the real estate and urban development industries. In Germany alone there are around 700 members.

The ULI states that it publishes publications and conducts research to “predict emerging trends and new issues in terms of land use and then propose creative solutions” and “provide knowledge that [helps] the development community theirs To continuously improve performance ”.

The Urban Land Institute also runs a number of initiatives and programs, such as B. An extensive advisory program providing real estate development and urban policy strategies to government, corporations and nonprofits. For more than 20 years, real estate entrepreneur programs have been developed that offer professional support in land use practice. The ULI also hosts certain events, such as local district council meetings or the annual fall and spring meeting.

Edward Walter has been Global Chief Executive Officer since June 2018. Walter succeeded Patrick L. Phillips, the former President of ERA AECOM , who in turn held the post of global CEO since September 2009. He succeeded Richard Rosan, who held both positions for 17 years. The Asian head office in Hong Kong has been managed by CEO John Fitzgerald since the end of 2013 and the European one in London by CEO Lisette van Doorn since January 2015. Executive Director Stephanie Baden chairs the office for Germany, Austria and Switzerland in Frankfurt .

history

1940s and 1950s

The Urban Land Institute was founded on December 14, 1936 during the Great Depression as the National Real Estate Foundation for Practical Research and Education , with the aim of becoming a research and educational academy in the real estate and urban culture industries. Two years after its headquarters in Chicago , the organization changed its name to the Urban Land Institute in 1939 . The institute's mission was announced in its own newsletter in 1940: "[...] was founded to support American cities with problems in planning, re-planning, construction and reconstruction."

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology welcomed the ULI to its first conference in 1941. A year later, the ULI recognized itself as an aid organization in the publication Outline for a Legislative Program to Rebuild Our Cities . In the same year the headquarters were moved to Washington.

Institute members Jesse Clyde Nichols, better known as JC Nichols, and Hugh Potter organized the first advice center, the Community Builder's Council , in 1944 to plan and build suburbs for cities that emerged after World War II . The institute's advisory program started in 1947 in cooperation with the City of Louisville .

1960s and 1980s

The 1950s were marked by the establishment of the JC Nichols Foundation (later integrated into the ULI Foundation) and the first cost analysis of shopping centers. In the 1960s, the ULI changed more and more towards a research institute and founded the first research program in 1960. The ULI conducted multi-year comparative land use studies and exerted widespread influence in Mexico City in 1965 with the first international general meeting. Two years later the Community Builder's Council went on its first study tour through Europe.

In the 1970s the organization grew and expanded in several directions. The Urban Land Research Foundation (later called the ULI Foundation) was established with the aim of "helping meet the growing demands for wider access to development information." The Urban Land Institute had a membership of over 6,000 in 1974 and the annual budget grew to over $ 1.5 million in 1976. In 1979 the range of advice centers was expanded and the ULI Awards for Excellence introduced.

1990s and 2000s

In 1983, the ULI developed the regional counseling program with initially only seven counseling centers in various US cities. District advisory offices and in 1986 the first real estate school were founded.

UrbanPlan , the institute's second higher education program, was launched with the help of a grant from the National Geographic Society Education Foundation. In 1992 the first two European district advice centers were set up in London and Barcelona .

In addition, the ULI Senior Resident Fellows Program was established in 1996 and the first ULI Mayor's Forum was held with the intention of creating a workshop with city authorities and private companies to find solutions to problems in the city.

21st century

In 2000, the ULI JC Nicholson Prize for Visionaries in Urban Development was introduced and there were 39 ULI advisory centers in Europe, Asia and South America. The following year, ULI opened its first European office in Brussels , and the first Young Leaders group was formed in the ULI District Advisory Center in Houston . By 2005, Young Leaders groups had also been set up in a large part of all district advice centers. Thomas Leinberger has been chairman of the “Europe Young Leaders” group since 2014.

The European office moved to London in 2004 and established the Community Action Grant program. In 2007, together with the opening of the ULI branch in Hong Kong, the "ULI Terwilliger Center for Housing" was founded. The number of members rose to over 40,000 in the following year. The Urban Land Institute founded the “ULI Daniel Rose Center for Public Leadership in Land Use” and the “Urban Investment Network” in Europe. In 2011, the National Building Museum in Washington, DC announced the Urban Land Institute as the recipient of the 2012 Honor Award for assistance and guidance in urban planning and community development. According to the museum's Executive Director, Chase Rynd, the museum selected the ULI because of its "long-standing commitment to multidisciplinary, impartial research that affects entire community systems," and because of its leadership in "urban and transport planning and the Strategy development down to the elementary fundamentals in order to increase the quality of life in urban communities worldwide ”.

In 2014, the Urban Land Institute and the National League of Cities partnered to collaborate in the management and operation of the Daniel Rose Center For Public Leadership in Land Use to help it develop and influence another field of city government to be helpful.

Influencing procedures and practice

Because of its numerous programs, the Urban Land Institute gained influence over procedures and practice for decades. The institute has no lobby, but works and researches together with its members in the areas of land use and urban development. The Journal of Association Leadership wrote in 2005 that the ULI "counts on the experience and expertise of its members in real estate and urban development, using many of the principles to solve problems, in The Wisdom of Crowds ( The Wisdom of Crowds are written) : Knowledge, Cooperation, Coordination ". With a membership of "26 sciences and 13 branches of industry, in the public sector as well as private companies, the institute today imparts core competencies that have developed through the collective knowledge of the members, and structures communities as a self-organizing system."

Since the middle of the 20th century, the Urban Land Institute has been consulted by city administrations and private landowners on problems with real estate and development. These multidisciplinary teams of experts in the fields of architecture, urban planning, transport, finance and market research had accepted and implemented many of the advice and tips. The institute's local district advisory offices invite administrators and private industrialists to speculate on the future of land use, and also established an UrbanPlan classroom that is used by many schools across the United States. In addition, through a large number of partnerships, the ULI was able to take over the management and competencies in urban development processes, for example as a partner of the World Economic Forum (WEF).

Initiatives and programs (selection)

Advisory services

Oklahoma City National Memorial after the Murrah Federal Building bombing

The Urban Land Institute's advisory programs bring together experienced real estate and land use teams who provide innovative solutions for complex land use and real estate development projects, programs and policies. Since 1947, over 600 advisory teams have been established in 47 US states, 12 countries and four continents. During that time, they have helped find creative and practical solutions to problems such as downtown redevelopment, land management, development potential, urban management, community revitalization, workforce, finance and wealth management. They also provided professional and objective advice after disasters such as hurricanes, floods, tornadoes, infrastructure mismanagement and after acts of terrorism.

For example, it would be worth mentioning the support for rehabilitation after disasters such as the collapse of the Interstate 35W Mississippi River Bridge in Minneapolis in 2007 or the advice to the city administration on the reconstruction of Lower Manhattan after the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001 .

Some of the advisors 'recommendations have been controversial, such as the advice on the New Orleans rehabilitation after Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Others have the teams' recommendations for their support in the months following the Murrah Federal Building bombing praised in Oklahoma City .

ULI J. Ronald Terwilliger Center for Housing

The Terwilliger Center for Housing is a project of the Urban Land Institute for affordable increases in production and the construction of workers' housing near commercial areas. It was founded with a donation of $ 5 million by former Trammell Crow Residential Chairman Ron Terwilliger. The center published a variety of reports on affordable housing in convenient locations, such as: B. for San Francisco, Washington, and Boston .

Daniel Rose Center For Public Leadership in Land Use

The Rose Center, now jointly managed with the National League of Cities, strives to enable excellent land-use decision making by providing the public with resources to develop efficient land use practices. The center was founded in 2008 with a $ 5 million donation from Daniel Rose, chairman of Rose Associates, based in New York. Annually, the Rose Center names four mayors as Rose Center Fellows of the Year. Each of these elects three local land use consultants to support him in his office. For example, the mayors of Kansas Sly James, of Nashville Karl Dean , of Philadelphia Michael Nutter and Omaha Jean Stothert should be mentioned.

ULI Center for Capital Markets and Real Estate

In 2009 the institute founded the "ULI Center for Capital Markets and Real Estate". According to the statements of the ULI, it is its task to “impart skills in the real estate and capital market economy and to guarantee support in this area”. The center invites you to a capital market and real estate conference every year, where industrialists, experts and economists come together for two days. It is the publisher of the semi-annual “Real Estate Consensus Forecast”, which is often quoted in financial magazines. Since its inception, the center has also been responsible for the publication of the annual emerging trends in real estate in partnership with PricewaterhouseCoopers International .

ULI Center for Sustainability

The “Center for Sustainability” was founded in 2014 by influential building contractors for design and energy-efficient development. The center emerged from the “ULI Greenprint Center for Building Performance” and the “Urban Resilience Program”.

ULI Greenprint Center for Building Performance

In 2012, the Greenprint Foundation and the Urban Land Institute formed the ULI Greenprint Center for Building Performance. It is hoped that this merger will reduce greenhouse gas emissions in the global real estate industry. The center is known for its annual “Greenprint Performance Report” for members to assess their progress in reducing emissions. This report is based on the "Greenprint Carbon Index", demonstrably transparent for property owners, in order to be able to benchmark their portfolios . Members of the center include companies such as Grosvenor, GE Capital and Jones Lang LaSalle .

UrbanPlan

UrbanPlan is an educational initiative of the institute that originated in San Francisco. It was developed in collaboration with high school teachers in the fields of economics, land use and real estate businesses and the Fisher Center for Real Estate and Urban Economics (FCREUE) at the University of California, Berkeley . The development history includes the hypothetical scenario in which students deal with requests to develop local areas into differently used communities. By means of role-play exercises between the clientele concerned and the developers, as well as presentations of their proposals in front of a city council made up of volunteer real estate experts, students learn the basics of urban planning processes and how to influence the client's development wishes and their decisions. Since the beginning, over 27,000 college and university students have taken part in the UrbanPlan program. In 2014 the program was launched in the UK through a partnership with the Investment Property Forum Educational Trust .

Awards ceremonies and competitions (selection)

2010 JC Nichols Prize winner : Richard M. Daley
Award of Excellence 2016 winner : National September 11 Museum & Memorial

The Urban Land Institute hosts several award ceremonies throughout the year, including the ULI Awards for Excellence , the ULI Gerald D. Hines Student Urban Design Competition , the JC Nichols Prize for Visionaries in Urban Development , the Amanda Burden Urban Open Space Award, and the Jack Kemp Models of Excellence Awards .

JC Nichols Prize

The Urban Land Institute JC Nichols Prize for Visionaries in Urban Development is awarded annually to a person (or a representative of an institute) who has had major responsibility for land development. The Nichols Prize was introduced in 2000 in honor of the legendary and influential Kansas City land developer Jesse Clyde Nichols . The winner will receive a $ 100,000 prize donated by the Nichols Family to the ULI Foundation. Among the winners so far have been Mayors Richard M. Daley , Amanda Burden, Peter Calthorpe, Vincent Scully and Prince Aga Khan IV.

ULI Awards for Excellence

According to the Urban Land Institute "the ULI Awards for Excellence define the standard for real estate development worldwide". Established in 1978, the award ceremony is the main program of the ULI's advances in finding and promoting the best development processes in real estate projects and their integration into the urban environment. The prizes are awarded to development projects in the Americas, Europe and Asia / Pacific regions. Each of these regions has its own jury, schedule and fees. The winners of each competition compete against each other at the Global Awards for Excellence .

In March 2016, the National September 11 Memorial Museum & Pavilion in New York won the Excellence in Institutional Development Award .

ULI Amanda Burden Urban Open Space Award

The ULI Amanda Burden Urban Open Space Award , presented annually, is given for a special public environment design within the city, which gives it a special local character and revitalizes the area. The ULI JC Nichols Prize winner Amanda Burden donated $ 100,000 to found the award in 2009 . Campus Martius Park in Detroit was the first prize winner with the $ 10,000 prize.

ULI Jack Kemp Excellence in Affordable and Workforce Housing Award

The ULI Jack Kemp Excellence in Affordable and Workforce Housing Award is given to one of the leading urban developers who help to meet housing needs in an affordable way and thus build communities of all walks of life. The award was donated by the ULI Terwilliger Center in 2008 under the name ULI J. Ronald Terwilliger Workforce Housing Models of Excellence Award . It was later renamed in honor of Jack Kemp .

ULI Gerald D. Hines Student Urban Design Competition

The ULI Gerald D. Hines Student Urban Design Competition was created for 2003 graduate students competing for a $ 50,000 prize. To do this, a team must cover at least three disciplines. A real, large-scale development area is selected for this every year. The teams have two weeks to work out a comprehensive design and development plan. A jury of interdisciplinary experts in the field of architecture and land use will select the winning team from the finalists. Past finalists have included teams from the University of Pennsylvania , University of California, Berkeley , Columbia University, and a mixed team from North Carolina State University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill .

Publications

In addition to an annual report, the Urban Land Institute publishes books, reports and journals about its own research and the members of its organization. In addition to its main organ, Urban Land, it publishes other publications such as The Community Builders Handbook , Emerging Trends in Real Estate , The Homeowners Association Handbook , "Advisory Service Panel Reports" and the annual Infrastructure Report.

Magazines

The first edition of the main body Urban Land took place in 1941. Currently the journal appears every 2 months and is only available to members of the institute. It includes articles on land use, the real estate market, and industry related to these issues. Further publication series followed such as Multifamily Trends and Urban Land Green . Urban Land has been available online since 2010 .

Annual reports

The research report Emerging Trends in Real Estate , founded by the Real Estate Research Corporation in 1979, is currently (2016) published twice a year. In 2004 the Urban Land Institute and PricewaterhouseCoopers took over the publication of the report, which was widely received in the real estate, finance, development and capital industries. A further report is published each year in the three regions America, Asia / Pacific and Europe.

The Urban Land Institute Infrastructure Initiative also publishes an annual infrastructure report. With the support of Ernst & Young , the Urban Land Institute has been producing an annual report since 2007 that focuses on trends and topics in the infrastructure sector. Since the first edition of this report, the infrastructure report has again achieved considerable reception in both national and local media.

Works

Since its inception, the Urban Land Institute has published a variety of specialist literature on land use. In the first few decades, the ULI's Technical Bulletin Series was mainly published. The first issue, Mistakes We Have Made in Community Development , was written by JC Nichols in 1945. In 1947, The Community Builders Handbook was published . The New York Times received it as one of the most important books of the year on planning and the real estate market.

Other notable works are The City Fights Back (1954), The Dollars & Cents of Shopping Centers series (first edition 1961) and The Homes Association Handbook (1964). More recent works are among many The Investor's Guide to Commercial Real Estate (2014), Leading for the Long Term: European Real Estate Executives on Leadership and Management , Real estate market analysis: methods and case studies (2009) in 2nd edition, Growing cooler : the evidence on urban development and climate change (2008), Real estate development: principles and process (2007) in 4th edition and Professional Real Estate Development: The ULI Guide to the Business (2003) in 2nd edition.

Organization and meetings

The Urban Land Institute is a 501 (c) (3) registered not for profit organization under U.S. tax law and is governed by city ordinance. The organization is led by the workforce and volunteer members, while management is the responsibility of the global chairman, chairman of the board, trustees, senior management and the operations committee.

Main departments

Since the Urban Land Institute has been a global organization with members in various geographic regions, capitals and metropolitan areas, it has maintained federal and district main departments at the regional level. Networking events, conferences, technical advice and award ceremonies are held there among the regional members. In addition, the Urban Land Institute has 50 main production departments. These cadres consist of no more than 50 members each, while those of the corporate department bring confidential information and best practices from their specific industry. Membership in these main product departments is highly sought-after and reserved for full members of the organization.

Gatherings

Each year the ULI holds several industry events, addressed to both members and non-members. The main annual events of the ULI are the Spring and Fall Meetings, the Spring and Fall Meetings, in various cities in North America. These meetings received a lot of interest from both private and professional in the field of land use and there were already world famous people such as former US President Bill Clinton , JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon , actor Robert Redford , NBA Hall of Famer Magic presented Johnson and former Chairman of the United States Federal Reserve System Paul Volcker .

See also

Web links

Commons : Urban Land Institute  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

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