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§ Private Profile · Fisher Center for Real Estate and Urban Economics, 2000 Center St Ste 303, Berkeley, CA 94704, United States
Educates professionals; researches real estate, urban economics, public policy, California economy, land use.
The Fisher Center for Real Estate & Urban Economics is a Berkeley, California-based academic institution that educates students and professionals while conducting applied research on real estate, urban economics, and public policy. Operating within the UC Berkeley Haas School of Business, the center facilitates forums and executive education conferences for academics, government officials, and business leaders. As the second oldest university real estate research center in the United States, the organization is primarily funded by its Policy Advisory Board, which consists of industry executives who provide financial support in exchange for research updates. The center's leadership and notable affiliates include current Chair Ken Rosen, Professor Emeritus Sherman Maisel, Terra Firma Asset Management co-founder Christopher J. Hartung, and UC Berkeley Chancellor Rich Lyons. The academic institution was founded in 1950 and celebrates its 75th anniversary in 2025.
Key people at Fisher Center for Real Estate & Urban Economics.
Key people at Fisher Center for Real Estate & Urban Economics.
The Fisher Center for Real Estate & Urban Economics (FCREUE) is an academic research center at UC Berkeley's Haas School of Business, not a company or investment firm. Its mission is to educate students and real estate professionals while supporting and conducting research on real estate, urban economics, the California economy, land use, and public policy.[1][2][4] FCREUE excels nationally in urban economic and public policy research, serving as a hub for students (liaison to industry, career resources), academics (research funding), its Policy Advisory Board of real estate and finance leaders (market updates, research input), and practitioners (executive education).[1][3][4]
FCREUE traces its roots to pioneering work in real estate research at UC Berkeley, with Professor Emeritus Sherman Maisel playing a foundational role. Maisel, who studied housing market fluctuations during business cycles and originated concepts behind mortgage-backed securities while at the Federal Reserve, helped restart the center after it had nearly disappeared.[6] Under leaders like current chair Ken Rosen, it evolved from early studies on housing industry dynamics and racism's impact on prices into a comprehensive program focused on California-specific economics and policy.[1][6] Established formally through partnerships with industry leaders via its Policy Advisory Board (PAB), which has provided financial support for over 30 years, FCREUE has grown into a key resource across Haas, the College of Environmental Design, and other Berkeley programs.[3][4]
While rooted in traditional real estate and urban economics, FCREUE influences the tech-adjacent proptech and urban innovation ecosystem by researching land use, housing affordability, and policy amid California's tech-driven growth. It analyzes market forces like below-market-rate requirements' impacts on housing supply during recessions, informing developers and policymakers in high-cost tech hubs like the Bay Area.[2] Timing aligns with trends in urban density, remote work shifts post-pandemic, and proptech (e.g., data analytics for real estate), where Berkeley's proximity to Silicon Valley amplifies its role in bridging academia with industry on sustainable urban development.[1][4] Through PhD training and alumni in investment banking/private equity, it shapes talent for tech-infused real estate segments like industrial/logistics for e-commerce.[5]
FCREUE will likely expand research into emerging areas like climate-resilient urban planning and AI-driven real estate analytics, fueled by PAB insights and California's volatile housing-tech intersection. Trends such as affordability crises, proptech adoption, and policy shifts (e.g., zoning reforms) will define its agenda, enhancing its influence on evidence-based decisions. As Berkeley's real estate thought leader, it remains pivotal for educating the next wave of professionals navigating tech-transformed markets, building on its legacy of practical, California-focused impact.[1][2][4]