Ada Louise Huxtable and the Shape of New York
Thursday, May 30, 2013
Panel discussion at the Museum of the City of New York exploring the role of pioneering architectural critic Ada Louise Huxtable (1921–2013) in the evolution of New York’s built environment. Huxtable left an indelible mark on the shape of postwar New York. Her thinking about the city inspired and challenged generations of architects, planners, developers, and critics.
Moderator: Hilary Ballon, Professor of Urban Studies and Architecture, New York University. Panelists: Michael Sorkin, architectural critic and author; Stanton Eckstut, Principal at Perkins Eastman Architects; Donald Elliott, Chairman of the City Planning Commission under Mayor John V. Lindsay; and Lynne B. Sagalyn, Earle W. Kazis and Benjamin Schore Professor of Real Estate, Director, MBA Real Estate Program and Director, Paul Milstein Center for Real Estate, Columbia University. Information and tickets . . .
Archive
The Future of Mortgage Finance
Thursday, April 18, 2013
Panel discussion at the Forum on the Future of Housing. Moderator: Nick Timiraos, Wall Street Journal. Panelists: Mike Fratantoni, Vice President, Mortgage Bankers Association; Jason Gold, Senior Fellow for Financial Markets, Progressive Policy Institute; Laurie Goodman, Senior Managing Director, Amherst Securities Group L.P.; Chris Mayer, Paul Milstein Professor of Real Estate, Columbia Business School; Scott Simon, Managing Director, Pacific Investment Management Co.
Women Builders Council Inaugural Annual Conference: Building Up and Moving Forward in New York
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
Lynne B. Sagalyn, Earle W. Kazis and Benjamin Schore Professor of Real Estate and Director of the Paul Milstein Center for Real Estate, moderated the opening panel at this day-long conference focusing on the current business climate in New York and opportunities in the building industry. Panel: "The Current Economy: Development and Investment," with Jeff Dvorett, Vice President, Extell Development Group; MaryAnne Gilmartin, Executive Vice President, Commercial and Residential Development, Forest City Ratner Companies; and Adam Weinstein, President and CEO, The Phipps Houses Group.
Tensions in the Global Regulatory Environment
Monday, May 21, 2012
At this conference in Tokyo presented by Columbia Business School's Center on Japanese Economy and Business, Paul Milstein Professor of Real Estate Christopher Mayer participated in a panel, "Mortgage Financing Institutions and Housing: United States and Japan." The panel was moderated by Kay Shimizu, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Columbia University, and also included Alicia Ogawa, Senior Advisor, Center on Japanese Economy and Business, and Hiroo Ichikawa, Professor of Urban Policy and Dean, Professional Graduate School of Governance Studies, Meiji University.
The Grid and Cycles of Planning
April 17, 2012
Panel discussion at the Museum of the City of New York, co-sponsored by the Paul Milstein Center for Real Estate at Columbia Business School. Topic: Manhattan's street grid was designed as a template for real estate growth in New York City; and it worked! Throughout the city's history, however, market cycles, design strategies, aesthetic goals and economic issues have changed; and architects, policy makers, brokers, and residents continue to debate how real estate should be built in relationship to the grid.
Moderator: Julie V. Iovine, Executive Editor of The Architect's Newspaper, about the history of New York City real estate and some of the cycles in planning: the erasure of streets with the creation of superblocks in the mid-20th century, and more recently, the reimposition and reinvigoration of the grid pattern around the city, in neighborhoods and developments including Battery Park City. Panelists: Elizabeth Blackmar, professor of history at Columbia University; Stanton Eckstut, FAIA, Founding Principal of EE&K Architects; Tommy Craig, Senior Managing Director, Hines East Region and adjunct professor of real estate at Columbia Business School; and Lynne B. Sagalyn, Earle W. Kazis and Benjamin Schore Professor of Real Estate and the Director of the Paul Milstein Center for Real Estate at Columbia Business School.
America’s Housing Crisis: Private-Sector Responses and Public Policy Innovation
April 4-5, 2012
Special Presentations by Nobel Prize-Winning Economist Joseph E. Stiglitz of Columbia Business School and Ronnie Chan, Chairman of Hang Lung Properties, Ltd.
Nand and Jeet Khemka Distinguished Speaker Forum
February 23, 2012
Featured speaker Chetan Dave, President and CEO of Real Estate Investments, Infrastructure Development Finance Company, Mumbai.
Seniors Housing and Care Sector Panel
February 21, 2012
A panel discussion for those who would like to plan a career or learn about investment opportunities in this growing sector.
Robert G. Kramer, President, NIC will moderate the discussion. Panelists include John Moore, Chief Executive Officer, Atria Senior Living; John Cobb, Senior Vice President and Chief Investment Officer, Ventas, Inc.; Anthony Crooks, Director, AEW Capital Management, L.P.; and James Scribner '09, Managing Director, RED Capital Group.
Where is New York? High Design at HL23
January 30, 2012
Organized and moderated by Vishaan Chakrabarti, Real Estate Development, GSAPP and Professor Lynne Sagalyn, Paul Milstein Center for Real Estate, Columbia Business School, this is the fourth installment of the monthly series "Where is New York?*"
Jointly sponsored by GSAPP and Columbia Business School, this event brought Los Angeles architect Neil Denari and New York developer Alf Naman together to discuss HL23's realization, from its aerodynamic design and site relationship to its significance for New York's high-end real estate market.
Building Columbia's Manhattanville Campus
October 11, 2011
A Discussion with Phill Pitruzzello, Vice President, Manhattanville Development, Columbia University
Hunters Point South:Building a New Neighborhood
Monday, April 11, 2011
Hunters Point South will transform an underused stretch of Queens waterfront into a community of 5,000 housing units for 9,000 residents, 60% of which will be targeted fro middle-income residents. Phase I, which recently broke ground, is set to be done by 2014. The first phase of this 10-year, $350-million project under the sponsorship of NYC Housing and Preservation Department has just been awarded to a partnership of The Related Companies, Phipps House and Mondadnock Construction.
Panelists included Holly Leicht, Deputy Commissioner, New York City Housing and Preservation Department; Nick Lembo, Principal, Monadnock Construction, Inc.; Frank Monterisi, the Related Companies; and Adam Weinstein, President and CEO, the Phipps House Group
The panel was mooderated by Lynne Sagalyn, Earle W. Kazis and Benjamin Schore Professor of Real Estate & Director, Paul Milstein Center for Real Estate and introduced by Vishaan Chakrabarti, Marc Holliday Professor of Real Estate Development and Director, Real Estate Development Program Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation
Hosted by The Paul Milstein Center for Real Estate and The MsRED Program
Entrepreneurial Women in Real Estate, a Panel Discussion
Thursday, February 24, 2011
Every other year the Milstein Center hosts a panel discussion on some aspect of women’s careers in real estate. In 2011 the dialogue was focused on women’s entrepreneurial ventures.
Cia Buckley ’93 of Dune Capital Management moderated the discussion. Panelists included Andrea Wenner ’05, Out2Play, Suzanne Sunshine ’91, S. Sunshine & Associates Real Estate, Gentry Hoit ’90, Atlantic Assets Group, and Nancy Lashine '81, Park Madison Partners.
Finding Value in Real Estate with William Ackman
Tuesday, November 9, 2011
Jointly hosted with the Heilbrunn Center for Graham & Dodd Investing, and the Columbia Investment Management Association
Tomorrow's Buildings Today: Keeping New York Competitive
November 22, 2010
The Paul Milstein Center for Real Estate and The Real Estate Development Program at Graduate School of Architecture, Preservation & Planning hosted a joint panel event examining some of the newest and “greenest” commercial buildings in New York City and their cumulative role in maintaining our competitiveness as a City. With an emphasis on the owner/developer’s perspective, the panel brought together the project leads for three of the most important new office structures in New York, namely One Bryant Park, 7 WTC and the Hearst Building. The first two projects represent multi-tenant projects while the final project represents an owner-occupied headquarters building. In brief presentations, each panelist discusses the critical decisions made by their owners in terms of location, architect selection, building technology, amenities, and sustainability.
The panelists were: Helena Rose Durst, Vice President, The Durst Organization; Janno Lieber, President of World Trade Center Properties LLC, Silverstein Properties; and Brian Schwagerl, former Director of Corporate Real Estate and Facilities Planning for The Hearst Corporation.
The panel was co-moderated by Vishaan Chakrabarti, Marc Holliday Professor of Real Estate Development and Director, Real Estate Development Program at Columbia GSAPP, and Lynne Sagalyn, Earle W. Kazis and Benjamin Schore Professor of Real Estate and Director, Paul Milstein Center for Real Estate at Columbia Business School.
Columbia Business School Alumni discuss opportunities in downturns
February 3, 2010
The Paul Milstein Center for Real Estate hosts a speakers’ panel in Warren Hall on the Columbia University campus. Four Columbia Business School alumni currently working in various real estate sectors discuss where students may look to find opportunities during this difficult economic time. The panel is moderated by Senior Vice Dean and Paul Milstein Professor of Real Estate Chris Mayer.
Watch the video of this panel.
(Flash player)
Download bios of the panelists (PDF, 91KB).
High Line Panel Discussion
On October 13, 2009 the Milstein Center for Real Estate hosted a panel discussion on the High Line. Panelists discussed how, what, when, where, and why the High Line evolved from a derelict elevated railroad track into one of Manhattan's newest and most exciting public parks. Also explored was the development of the surrounding West Chelsea neighborhood.

