Europe and the Middle East
National Councils are ULI’s country specific networks which bring together members working in the same location.
European Product Councils offer a unique opportunity for members across Europe to meet and share best practice with people operating in the same sector of the real estate industry.
ULI’s Young Leaders programme provides a forum for members under 35 years of age to network with their peers, gain exposure to senior industry professionals and continue their professional education and development.
ULI NEXT engages and supports members aged 35-45 into all of ULI’s activities.
Collaboration showcases cutting-edge tech solutions to key real estate challenges.
As concerns about the sustainability of the world’s love affair with the car and airplane grow, the European Union aims to put more people back on trains, a strategy that will require not only laying new tracks but refurbishing old stations. From Barcelona to Vilnius, some of these developments aim not only to make public transportation more convenient but to renew the quarter in which they are located.
Regulatory environment among the barriers to more adoption of modular construction techniques in Europe.
Lars Huber, the CEO of Hines Europe, has been appointed as ULI Europe Chairman. Huber, who succeeds Marnix Galle, Executive Chair of the Board of developer Immobel, will serve on a voluntary basis for a two-year term starting on July 1.
Marnix Galle, executive chairman of Belgian developer Immobel, has been appointed ULI Europe Chairman, serving on a voluntary basis for a two-year term starting on July 1, 2020, and will join the ULI Global Board of Directors. He succeeds outgoing Europe Chairman Juergen Fenk, member of the executive board, SIGNA Holding GmbH.
New lending by European banks is likely to remain strictly conservative, limiting liquidity for the European property market.
At the ULI Europe Paris 2011 conference in February, former Irish Prime Minister John Bruton said that, in addressing their nations’ economic troubles, Europeans see problems that cannot be fixed, whereas Americans see challenges for which solutions have not yet been found. Learn what he says about Europe’s banking crisis and how to get the monkey off the back of the European economy.