﻿<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><rss version="2.0"><channel><title>Urban Land - Resorts/Second Homes</title><link>http://urbanland.uli.org/IndustrySectors/ResortsSecondHomes?rss=true</link><description>RSS Feed for ULI Magazine articles</description><language>en</language><item><title>University Real Estate Programs Today: Active and Evolving</title><description>Universities are joining real estate with related business and design curriculums—and boosting their hands-on experiences for students.</description><link>http://urbanland.uli.org/Articles/2012/Dec/PorterUniversity</link><pubDate>20121217130900</pubDate><author>Douglas Porter</author></item><item><title>Many Shades of Gray: Baby Boomers And Their Disparate Needs</title><description>The over-65 population is shunning institutional settings in favor of walkable, amenity-rich communities in cities or close-in suburbs. And conflict is coming as seniors compete with younger residents for scarce government resources.</description><link>http://urbanland.uli.org/Articles/2012/Dec/BraunsteinGray</link><pubDate>20121213132600</pubDate><author>Leslie Braunstein</author></item><item><title>Opportunities and Risk Return to Asian Markets</title><description>Risk is a fact-of-life that needs to be constantly assessed on the ground, a trio of experts said at a session on Asia real estate capital markets. </description><link>http://urbanland.uli.org/Articles/2012/Oct/RebchookAsia</link><pubDate>20121019153500</pubDate><author>John Rebchook</author></item><item><title>Urban Opportunities Arise Among Others for High-End Resorts</title><description>Resort developers and operators took a hit during the recession, but are making a cautious comeback, according to a panel at ULI’s Fall Meeting.</description><link>http://urbanland.uli.org/Articles/2012/Oct/BraunsteinResorts</link><pubDate>20121019143700</pubDate><author>Leslie Braunstein</author></item><item><title>Vail After the Low-Snow Winter</title><description>How do you guide the resort and real estate businesses through an erratic economy—and the fickle whims of Mother Nature? </description><link>http://urbanland.uli.org/Articles/2012/Oct/RebchookVail</link><pubDate>20121010111400</pubDate><author>John Rebchook</author></item><item><title>Evolution of Chicago’s Navy Pier Shaped by ULI Advisory Service Panels</title><description>In 1989, a ULI Advisory Services panel was convened to help the city arrest serious decay at Navy Pier, which had experienced a decline so apparent that there was even talk of closing it, eliminating its unparalleled views of the Chicago skyline. But the ULI panel came back with a framework for reimagining Navy Pier.</description><link>http://urbanland.uli.org/Articles/2012/June/ul/FaheyChicago</link><pubDate>20120803103700</pubDate><author>Valerie Fahey</author></item><item><title>Eclectic Place Making at Singapore’s Keppel Bay</title><description>Natural assets, combined with inventive design, help transform a global gateway.</description><link>http://urbanland.uli.org/Articles/2012/July/BrandesSingapore</link><pubDate>20120713160400</pubDate><author>Uwe Brandes</author></item><item><title>Tokyo Poised for Return to the Global Map</title><description>Participants at the ULI Japan Summer Conference in Tokyo speculated about the potential of the island nation as an international financial center and destination.</description><link>http://urbanland.uli.org/Articles/2012/July/McNicol_Japan</link><pubDate>20120711163200</pubDate><author>Tony McNicol</author></item><item><title>Salvaging the Distressed Condo Hotel</title><description>Following the resort bust in 2008, many developers, investors, and lenders in the condo-hotel market were left with broken projects. However, they can minimize their losses by converting those properties into traditional hotels or by selling or renting them as multifamily units.</description><link>http://urbanland.uli.org/Articles/2012/July/KelleyCondo</link><pubDate>20120703000000</pubDate><author /></item><item><title>China: Who Will Care for the Elderly?</title><description>In the new China, demand for housing for seniors is real. The country’s rapid urbanization is affecting China’s centuries-old tradition of multigenerational living, says Harvard’s Nicolas P. Retsinas.</description><link>http://urbanland.uli.org/Articles/2012/April/ul/RetsinasChinaElderly</link><pubDate>20120420131900</pubDate><author>Nicolas Retsinas</author></item></channel></rss>