Real Estate

The 100 Most Powerful People in New York Real Estate

Bloomberg, Trump, Ratner, De Niro, the Guy Behind Craigslist! They’re All Among Our 100 Most Powerful People in New York Real Estate

This article was published in the May 19, 2008, edition of The New York Observer.


Power. Webster’s Dictionary defines power as … No, no, no, never mind that: Power in New York City real estate means money—its acquisition, spending and creation—especially now, as the market enters a tremulous sunset after several bright, shiny years.

Our list of the 100 Most Powerful People in New York Real Estate was assembled with this finance-centric criterion at the forefront. The list, especially higher up, contains those who animate the deals and the trends. They are the deciders and the money providers. They make the real estate world the rest of us live in; or cover, as the case may be.

This criterion explains why some people were obvious picks (financiers like No. 20 Josef Ackermann and No. 7 Lloyd Blankfein; developers like No. 1 Jerry Speyer and No. 9 Douglas Durst; landlords like No. 33 Bill Rudin and No. 66 Lloyd Goldman); and why some picks weren’t so obvious initially (No. 58 Charles Stevenson, the co-op board president at 740 Park; No. 26 Robert De Niro, perhaps the greatest living actor who became Tribeca’s greatest booster; No. 15 Edward Egan, the Catholic archbishop of New York with all that church property under his purview).

The criterion also helps explain why we didn’t rank any brokers until No. 25 Dolly Lenz, probably the most successful residential broker in the U.S. Why? However capable and ingenious in the commissioned service of those spending the capital, brokers are facilitators for the likes of Messrs. Durst and Speyer (or of Messrs. De Niro and Egan, for that matter). They are not the initiators.

The same holds for public officials, including the mighty Michael Bloomberg (No. 2). They seem to be at their best for real estate either facilitating its development or standing clear of its ascendancy. That is, obstructionist or helper; and Mr. Bloomberg’s administration has done very little of the former and a lot of the latter.

Finally, a few observations about the top 100.

It, like the upper echelons of New York real estate, was whiter than East Hampton’s, well, white pages: David Jackson (No. 50), the CEO of Istithmar, and Governor David Paterson (No. 13) were the only African-Americans on the list.

And Ms. Lenz, the broker, was the highest-ranking woman in private industry. She was joined by just eight other women.

Also, the list, as you might expect for one based on money and its management, was heavy on extreme wealth, even by New York standards, including both inherited (Kent Swig, Rob Speyer, Billy Macklowe, Donald Trump and Bill Rudin) and self-created (Mort Zuckerman, Joseph Moinian, Leonard Litwin and Larry Silverstein).

There were, however, a fair amount of almost-from-nothing entrepreneurs splashed across the list: Lockhart Steele, No. 91, publisher of the Curbed Network of blogs; Michael Shvo, No. 100, Manhattan luxury marketing in the meticulously tanned flesh; Craig Newmark, No. 6, that guy in glasses from San Francisco who has all the brokers frightened for their livelihoods; Keith McNally, No. 90, the hotel bellhop who became a restaurant deity; and on …

Who knows who’ll make it next year?

1

Jerry Speyer

Jerry Speyer

Chairman and CEO of Tishman Speyer

Mr. Speyer may lack Donald Trump’s bluster, but the titan sealed the most expensive residential purchase in history ($5.4 billion for Stuyvesant Town and Cooper Village); owns the MetLife and Chrysler buildings and Rockefeller Center; and very nearly won the right to develop the West Side rail yards.

 

2

Michael Bloomberg

Michael Bloomberg

Mayor of New York City

More than any other lawmaker, Mr. Bloomberg sets the tone for development in New York City. In his six-plus years as mayor, he has boosted below-market-rate housing, opened up swaths of the waterfront to new construction, laid groundwork for development on the far West Side and pushed a series of mega-projects.

 

3

Stephen Ross

Stephen Ross

Chairman and CEO of the Related Companies

Mr. Ross may have lost the competition for the West Side rail yards, but the steadfast friend of Dan Doctoroff is still riding high, injecting $500 million into the Bronx Terminal Market, chairing REBNY and working with Vornado’s Steve Roth to resuscitate the Moynihan Station plan.

 

4

Marc Holliday

Marc Holliday

CEO of SL Green

Mr. Holliday heads New York City’s largest commercial landlord, SL Green. The firm, with 67 properties scattered across New York and Connecticut, has recently made forays beyond its bread-and-butter portfolio of Class B buildings. Along with a minority Canadian partner, SL Green made the last giant building purchase of 2007, the $1.6 billion purchase of Citigroup’s 388-390 Greenwich Street downtown.

5

Amanda Burden

Amanda Burden

Chair, City Planning
Commission; Director,
Department of City Planning

Any major land-use change in the city must pass over Ms. Burden’s desk—if it didn’t originate there in the first place. She has presided over 82 rezonings covering more than 6,100 blocks, and to date, she is the shining star of the Bloomberg administration’s still-incomplete development legacy. Next Page >

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Comments
Post a comment

Norman Oder (not verified) says:

While the listing is flattering to me, I can't say I'm convinced. Absent, for example, is Charles Bagli, the veteran real estate/development reporter for the New York Times--and formerly at the Observer. Among those deserving but absent from the list are two not so well-known but very important officials responsible for affordable housing financing, Marc Jahr, president of the New York City Housing Development Corporation and Priscilla Almodovar, president and CEO of the New York State Housing Finance Agency and affiliated agencies. Also absent but deserving is Bertha Lewis, executive director of New York ACORN.

More observations here:
http://atlanticyardsreport.blogspot.com/2008/05/so-whos-77-on-observers-...

Anonymous (not verified) says:

This list was not put together by anyone who is familiar with New York City real estate. I am not convinced at all.

Anonymous (not verified) says:

This list was not put together by anyone who is familiar with New York City real estate. I am not convinced at all.

Anonymous (not verified) says:

Of course we can nit pick this list all day - my comment is that Markus (and his board) should be in the top ten.

Anonymous (not verified) says:

Either I somehow missed it, or you actually left off David and Jed Walentas from this list? They own a huge chunk of DUMBO, are expanding into Cobble Hill with a new condo building + Trader Joe's, and are ALSO expanding into Manhattan. Seriously?

AD (not verified) says:

Notable Omissions: Louise Sunshine, Kelly Kennedy Mack, Richard Pandiscio, and David "Mayor of DUMBO" Walentas

Anonymous (not verified) says:

How did Norman Oder become the most powerful man in New York City real estate and development media?

Anonymous (not verified) says:

lloyd/jane goldman....they own more land in nyc than other private concern, i.e., the WTC site

Anonymous (not verified) says:

Marc Jacobs? Puh-leease!

Kushner Sucks (not verified) says:

The ultimate name drop!! Ridiculous. Kushner's paper is gay.

john massengale (not verified) says:

As much as I like the idea of 2 bloggers in the top 100, we're saying that my friend Norman Oder has more power in the world of New York real estate than people like Charlie Benenson or one of the Roses? I don't think so.

Anonymous (not verified) says:

Where is Richard Pandiscio and Pandiscio Co on your list? They have literally changed the way residential real estate is branded and marketed in New York, consequently upping the entire pricing game. More research, folks!

Anonymous (not verified) says:

Where is Richard Pandiscio and Pandiscio Co on your list? They have literally changed the way residential real estate is branded and marketed in New York, consequently upping the entire pricing game. More research, folks!

NVS (not verified) says:

At first I thought the list has some good names, in admittedly strange order, and of course people will get upset because everything is biased. But so be it. But then I realized it's ridiculous that Shvo is no. 100 while Lenz is no. 25 (hello?! at worst they should at least lie +/- 1 from each other or tie) and that the CEO of Deutsche Bank who is based in Frankfurt and who has little to do with real estate lending, especially in New York, (or CEO of JP Morgan - who both merely preside over top lending businesses) are more important than New York's Steve Roth and Bill Rudin. Are we supposed to take this seriously? And please don't use the cheezy excuse that you can never please everyone.

Anonymous (not verified) says:

charlie benenson is probably still powerful, but not as much as when he was alive.

missing: william mack of apollo real estate & his own family organization, the milsteins, arnold fisher, burt resnick, the goldman sachs partner in charge of real estate investments, his counterpart at morgan stanley, the elghanayans who are building up long island city, the governors of ny and nj who appoint the rulers of the port authority

john massengale (not verified) says:

I can't argue with the point about Charlie Benenson. I knew him, but obviously not well, since I didn't know he had died.

Your other names are also to the point, and to those can be added the people who set lending policies for Chase et al, construction people like Peter Lehrer, and perhaps even a bunch of architects who are more powerful in New York than Frank Gehry. He's only designed one building (plus a cafeteria and a clothing store) here, and he's not exactly smelling like roses in Brooklyn.

steve cuozzo (not verified) says:

ANDY ROONEY HERE ... actually Steve Cuozzo at The New York Post. Thanks for including me, I appreciate it, but who's the guy in the picture? Ain't moi.

Steve

Anonymous (not verified) says:

i forgot: peter l. malkin of the empire state building

Anonymous (not verified) says:

plus leona's executor (woof) and sandy lindenbaum, the richest zoning lawyer in new york

Anonymous (not verified) says:

You should dig deeper at Hall Willkie, you might blow open a dam that floods Brown Harris Stevens and his pets John Burger, Kathy Sloane and Paul Del Nunzio...of course, that takes GREAT reporting.

LM maven (not verified) says:

Where is Carl Weisbrod? Leader of Downtown Alliance and now president of Trinity Real Estate?

Realestatevideo (not verified) says:

Video is the most popular medium. Just look at the number of people visiting You Tube and similar web sites. The wise real estate agents can see the value in offering their listings through video.

Dave Moog (not verified) says:

I don't see why you included the Commissioner of Health and the Commissioner of Housing Preservation and Development since both are just following the Mayor's directives and not creating anything new in the real estate market. I would have included Matthew Haines and Ryan Slack, founders of Property Shark, for opening up real estate data to common homebuyers. Thousands of real estate transactions were influenced by data provided by their website.

Anonymous (not verified) says:

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Kelly (not verified) says:

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Old Greenwich (not verified) says:

Greenwich has also the East Greenwich Cove, where boats are parked and offer a different dining experience. Of course, the beaches across from the coast along the Goddard Memorial State Park, should be missed.

Anonymous (not verified) says:

Why did you omit that Richard Lipsky is on the payroll for Bruce Ratner? He went to the dark side a long time ago ... you should not omit that.

Anonymous (not verified) says:

I was surprised not to see DOUG HARMON from Eastdil on the list. He the deal maker real estate broker in NY.

Anonymous (not verified) says:

what about the bloggers? Brownstoner? Urbandigs? TrueGotham? You telling me these guys don't have any reach for NY Real Estate?

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