About

The Joseph E. Corcoran Center for Real Estate and Urban Action leverages a multidisciplinary approach to cultivate discussions and develop actions that foster community transformation.
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People

Leadership

Neil McCullagh

Neil McCullagh

Executive Director


617-552-0829
Carney Hall 430

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Neil McCullagh

Neil McCullagh

Executive Director

| 617-552-0829 | Carney Hall 430

  • M.P.A., Harvard University
  • MBA, Boston University
  • B.A., Boston College

Neil McCullagh is Executive Director of the Carroll School of Management’s Joseph E. Corcoran Center for Real Estate and Urban Action and a Lecturer at Boston College. Neil leads the Center’s activities related to curriculum development, student engagement, and community outreach.

Neil has experience in both the private and nonprofit sectors including extensive domestic and international experience directing high-impact social change initiatives. Neil has led multiyear programs in community development, economic development, and housing. This dynamic experience informs his teaching at Boston College, where his courses focus on analyzing the factors critical to successful transformation of urban neighborhoods and giving students "learning by doing" experiences.Ìý

Neil was the Executive Director of The American City Coalition (TACC), which provides place-based support to community based organizations focused on revitalization efforts in Boston and technical support to mixed-income housing developers. He served as Country Director for CHF International (now Global Communities) in Azerbaijan on a multiyear, community development program funded by the United States Agency for International Development. Prior to his work, he co-directed operations of a US-funded, private sector development program in Mongolia. He also oversaw all aspects of a reconstruction and refugee resettlement program in post-war Kosovo.

Neil holds an undergraduate degree from Boston College; an MBA from Boston University and an MPA from Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government, where he was awarded a Roy and Lila Ash Fellowship for Innovations in Democracy and Governance. He was a Jesuit Volunteer in JVC Southwest. He currently serves on the board of Rebuilding Together Boston.

Courses Taught


Taylor Perkins

Taylor Perkins

Associate Director


Office Hours Spring 2024 - Monday 3-4:30 & By Appointment
Carney Hall 431

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Taylor Perkins

Taylor Perkins

Associate Director

| Office Hours Spring 2024 - Monday 3-4:30 & By Appointment | Carney Hall 431

  • Ed.M., Harvard University
  • B.A., Amherst College

Taylor Perkins is Associate Director of the Corcoran Center and teaches in the Carroll School of Management. Taylor leads the Center’s programming and experiential learning efforts, directing the Center's summer program and national affordable housing real estate case competiton.

Taylor brings over twelve years of experience to the Corcoran Center. Active in the field of Real Estate and Urban Action, he currently serves as an appointee to Somerville MA MayorÌýKatjana Ballantyne's Public Safety for All Task Force, and has conducted action-focused research for local governments and nonprofit organizations. As a professor he focuses onÌýbridging the theoretical and practical realms within real estate and urban action through experiential learning, as well as robust engagement with professionals in the field and community members.Ìý

Taylor is a graduate of Amherst College, where he double majored in Black Studies and Political Science, and Harvard University, where he earned an Ed.M. in Higher Education. At Amherst College he was a four-year varsity track and field student athlete.

Taylor lives in Somerville, MA and is an avid boater, skier, and cyclist.

Courses Taught

  • Real EstateÌýColloquium

Affiliated Faculty

Faculty affiliated with the Corcoran Center conduct teaching and research that aligns with the Center's mission of improving neighborhoods and communities.
Matthew Littell

Matthew Littell



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Matthew Littell

Matthew Littell

Matthew Littell is one of the founding principals of Utile. Through his work in the firm’s architecture, planning, and early phase development projects, he has gained an expertise in building and zoning codes and regulatory processes specifically as they relate to urban design, housing and land use. His practice is local, national and international, and focuses on the intersection of public space, design of the built environment and land use policy.

Matthew served as Utile’s principal-in-charge for Imagine Boston 2030, the city’s first comprehensive plan in 50 years. He has directed many of the firm’s early phase planning and urban design projects, including the Downtown Boston Waterfront Municipal Harbor Plan, as well as the design guidelines and zoning for the Rose Kennedy Greenway District. He has led planning efforts in several Massachusetts Gateway cities, including Holyoke, Revere and Chelsea, MA, and has just completed a plan for Boston’s first Flood Resilience Guidelines and Zoning Overlay. He is currently the firm’s principal in charge for citywide rezoning efforts in Atlanta and Detroit, and leads Utile’s affordable housing efforts, which include the design of multiple developments in Boston and surrounding cities.

Matthew teaches a course on contemporary urban design issues at Boston College. He earned his M.Arch. from Harvard’s Graduate School of Design in 1997, where he received the Boston Society of Architects’ James Templeton Kelly award for the best final design project, as well as the Clifford Wong prize for outstanding design in housing.

Courses Taught

Urban Design for Complexity and SustainabilityÌý(BSLW220701)

Samantha Teixeira

Samantha Teixeira



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Samantha Teixeira

Samantha Teixeira

Samantha Teixeira, PhD, joined the faculty of the Ï㽶Ðã School of Social Work in 2015. Her research focuses on how neighborhood environmental conditions affect youth and how youth can be engaged in creating solutions to environmental problems in their communities. She uses innovative, mixed-methods with a focus on participatory approaches including community mapping, photography, and spatial analysis. Teixeira’s diverse practice experience includes work in child welfare and community development. Teixeira and Rebekah Levine Coley (Professor, Ï㽶Ðã LSEHD) are co-leading a five-year, $3 million grant from the National Institute of Minority Health and Health Disparities to study the effects of public housing redevelopment on the health and well being of more than 1,000 residents of the Mary Ellen McCormack housing development in South Boston.

David Price

David Price



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David Price

David Price

In January 2023 David Price began work at Boston College Law School to help lead a startup program, the Initiative on Land, Housing & Property Rights (ILHPR).Ìý This program seeks to preserve and expand property rights for disadvantaged communities across the United States by producing research, devising legal reform and policy solutions, engaging in community outreach, training law students, and drawing on other complementary strategies.

As Associate Director, David manages resource development, budget planning, communications, program planning and development and strategic planning.Ìý David reports to Professor Thomas Mitchell, the ILHPR Director and the Robert F. Drinan SJ Chair and Professor of Law at Ï㽶Ðã Law School.Ìý Professor Mitchell is the lead author of the , adopted by 23 states and other jurisdictionsÌý

David helps manage ILHPR programs, which seek to:

  • ÌýTrain and develop a new generation of real estate attorneys and community practitioners by strengthening their expertise in estate planning, property-related matters and community development on behalf of disadvantaged communities; and learn from these communities in order to inform and improve the work of the ILHPR;
  • Help develop legislative and policy solutions at the local, state and federal levels to advance the property rights of disadvantaged communities; and
  • Spur community-informed research into critical property issues affecting disadvantaged communities, using conferences, seminars, workshops and other gatherings.

The public launch of the ILHPR was a spring 2023 conference on Land Loss, Reparations and Housing Policy which drew 250 attendees to the law school.Ìý To date the ILHPR has secured the approval of a new law school degree concentration in Real Estate and Community Development Law, a key benchmark in the program’s efforts to guide students toward successful career [paths that also help them use their legal skills to benefit disadvantaged communities with property-related challenges.Ìý

Beginning in fall 2023, David teaches an undergraduate class at Ï㽶Ðã, The State of Affordable Housing in the United States, through an affiliation with the Corcoran Center on Real Estate and Urban Action.Ìý David taught Introduction to Law and Community Economic Development for two years at Southern New Hampshire University on an adjunct basis.Ìý He has written on gentrification, affordable housing and the racial wealth gap on a Housing Matters! blog.

Prior to joining Ï㽶Ðã Law, David worked for 27 years helping build strong local development organizations in Boston, including most recently over thirteen years as the Executive Director of Nuestra Comunidad Development Corporation in Boston’s Roxbury neighborhood, where he departed in 2022.Ìý Two transformative developments are Bartlett Station in Roxbury’s Nubian Square and The Loop at Mattapan Station.Ìý At Nuestra he co-founded Homes for Equity, a research and advocacy coalition dedicated to the adoption of race-conscious homeownership policies to redress redlining and other forms of housing discrimination in Roxbury.

Prior to joining Nuestra, David served as Deputy Director and General Counsel for Madison Park Development Corporation and as Executive Director for Tent City Corporation.Ìý David’s community organizing experience began as a volunteer with Mel King’s campaigns for Mayor of Boston in 1979 and 1983, during the time in which David lived in the Uphams Corner neighborhood in Boston.Ìý David is a graduate of Harvard College (1977) and Boston College Law School (1991).Ìý He clerked for Hon. Francis O’Connor at the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court and was a real estate attorney at Goulston & Storrs in Boston prior to joining the community development field.Ìý

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Courses Taught

The State of Affordable Housing in the States (BSLW2000)

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Neil McCullagh

Neil McCullagh



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Neil McCullagh

Neil McCullagh

Taylor Perkins

Taylor Perkins



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Taylor Perkins

Taylor Perkins

What We Do

In accordance with the mission of ÌýBoston College, The Corcoran Center aims to develop the next generation of ethical real estate professionals by educating and inspiring students, alumni, and other key stakeholders so they may harness real estate as a catalyst for needed change in areas where the marginalization of vulnerable citizens is most severe, and enact broad scope solutions to neighborhoods of concentrated poverty.

Curriculum: Increase access to traditional classroom learning, with real estate courses developed by the Center within the Carroll School of Management.

Experiential Learning: Engage students in a variety of practical, meaningful learning experiences, including workshop trainings, field projects, and summer internship programs.

On-Campus Engagement: Invite students to join the network of professionals and experts in the fields of real estate and urban revitalization through a speaker series, small group lunches, and Center coordinated activities.

Neighborhood Engagement: Create opportunities for multiple disciplines from across the University to engage in place-focused neighborhood strengthening.

Undergraduate Real Estate Council 2024-2025

Dawson Jessee

Dawson Jessee

Co-President
Hometown: Tampa, FL


Class of 2025
Major: Finance

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Dawson Jessee

Dawson Jessee

Co-President

Hometown: Tampa, FL

| Class of 2025 | Major: Finance

Dawson is interested in real estate finance and it's intersection with development, architecture, and environmental sustainability and resilience.

Justine Rozenich

Justine Rozenich

Co-President
Hometown: Glen Ellyn, IL


Class of 2025
Major: International Studies

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Justine Rozenich

Justine Rozenich

Co-President

Hometown: Glen Ellyn, IL

| Class of 2025 | Major: International Studies

Justine is interested in pursuing a career at the intersection of real estate finance and public policy. She is particularly interested in affordable housing, climate resilience, and zoning reform. She hopes to use her time on the Council to promote diversity within the broader real estate industry.

Patrick McMahon

Patrick McMahon

Vice-President
Hometown: Herndon, VA


Class of 2026
Major: Political Science & International Studies

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Patrick McMahon

Patrick McMahon

Vice-President

Hometown: Herndon, VA

| Class of 2026 | Major: Political Science & International Studies

Residential and Commercial Real Estate Policy

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Thomas Roche

Thomas Roche

Head of Special Projects and Research
Hometown: Pelham, NY


Class of 2025
Major: Political Science

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Thomas Roche

Thomas Roche

Head of Special Projects and Research

Hometown: Pelham, NY

| Class of 2025 | Major: Political Science

Tommy is interested in multifamily development and urban planning.

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Sydney Carmel

Sydney Carmel

Social Media Manager
Hometown: Los Angeles, CA


Class of 2027
Major: Finance and Marketing

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Sydney Carmel

Sydney Carmel

Social Media Manager

Hometown: Los Angeles, CA

| Class of 2027 | Major: Finance and Marketing

Sydney is interested in Real Estate Finance, and Urban planning / development.

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Jordan Paul

Jordan Paul

Head of Special Projects
Hometown: Pittsburgh, PA


Class of 2026
Major: Human Centered Engineering

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Jordan Paul

Jordan Paul

Head of Special Projects

Hometown: Pittsburgh, PA

| Class of 2026 | Major: Human Centered Engineering

Jordan is the President of Ï㽶Ðã Rebuilding Together Boston, a volunteer organization that repairs homes throughout the Greater Boston area. She is interested in giving more people access to safe and healthy homes through education and volunteer work.

Abigail Foote

Abigail Foote

Head of Events
Hometown: Jericho, Vermont


Class of 2026
Major: Economics

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Abigail Foote

Abigail Foote

Head of Events

Hometown: Jericho, Vermont

| Class of 2026 | Major: Economics

Abigail is interested in commercial real estate development, and more specifically, affordable housing development. Affordable housing is crucial for our communities, and our neighborhoods are severely lacking it despite the strong demand.

John Minnich

John Minnich

General Member
Hometown: Santa Fe, NM


Class of 2025
Major: Finance

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John Minnich

John Minnich

General Member

Hometown: Santa Fe, NM

| Class of 2025 | Major: Finance

John is an Incoming Development Program Analyst at PNC - Tax Credit Solutions.

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Jack Butler

Jack Butler

General Member
Hometown: McLean, VA


Class of 2026
Major:Information Systems and Entreprenuership

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Jack Butler

Jack Butler

General Member

Hometown: McLean, VA

| Class of 2026 | Major:Information Systems and Entreprenuership

Jack is interested in real estate development and investment, particularly as it relates to affordable multifamily housing.

Isabella Rodriguez-Trujillo

Isabella Rodriguez-Trujillo

Head of Inclusive Engagement
Hometown: Caguas, Puerto Rico


Class of 2026
Major: Public Health & Finance

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Isabella Rodriguez-Trujillo

Isabella Rodriguez-Trujillo

Head of Inclusive Engagement

Hometown: Caguas, Puerto Rico

| Class of 2026 | Major: Public Health & Finance

Isabella is particularly interested in the relationship between housing and health outcomes. I am passionate about affordable housing initiatives, community design that promotes active lifestyles, and the impact of environmental factors on resident well-being. I aim to explore how equitable real estate practices can enhance public health and create healthier communities for everyone.

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Jay Knight

Jay Knight

Special Projects and Research Team
Hometown: Greenwich, CT


Class of 2025
Major: Economics

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Jay Knight

Jay Knight

Special Projects and Research Team

Hometown: Greenwich, CT

| Class of 2025 | Major: Economics

Jay is passionate about sustainable building practices and the role of financial engineering to increase the supply of affordable housing.

Amy Foster

Amy Foster

General Member
Hometown: Wellesley MA


Class of 2025
Major: Economics and General Bussiness

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Amy Foster

Amy Foster

General Member

Hometown: Wellesley MA

| Class of 2025 | Major: Economics and General Bussiness

Amy is interested in development, specifically affordable or mixed income housing development.

Kathryn Bissell

Kathryn Bissell

Sophomore Representive
Hometown: Toledo, Ohio


Class of 2027
Major: Finance and Accounting

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Kathryn Bissell

Kathryn Bissell

Sophomore Representive

Hometown: Toledo, Ohio

| Class of 2027 | Major: Finance and Accounting

Kathryn Bissell is focused on pursuing opportunities in real estate within the realms of investment management and investment banking, aiming to integrate her passion for finance with real estate investments.

Kathleen Grady

Kathleen Grady

General Member
Hometown: Needham, MA


Class of 2027
Major: Economics

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Kathleen Grady

Kathleen Grady

General Member

Hometown: Needham, MA

| Class of 2027 | Major: Economics

Kathleen is interested in urban planning and real estate financing.

Ìý

Liv McHugh

Liv McHugh

Events Team
Hometown: Falmouth, Maine


Class of 2026
Major: Economics

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Liv McHugh

Liv McHugh

Events Team

Hometown: Falmouth, Maine

| Class of 2026 | Major: Economics

Liv is interested in all aspects of real estate development, including finance and construction. She is passionate about applying sustainable solutions to residential and commercial developments to accommodate the need for housing in Boston.

Matthew Pollini

Matthew Pollini

Events Team
Hometown: Kennebunk, Maine


Class of 2026
Major:Economics

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Matthew Pollini

Matthew Pollini

Events Team

Hometown: Kennebunk, Maine

| Class of 2026 | Major:Economics

Matthew isÌýinterested in real estate development, valuation, consulting, and tying in the idea of "inclusive prosperity" to create sustainable & equitable change.

Elliot Dryoff

Elliot Dryoff

General Council Member
Hometown: Vail, Colorado


Class of 2026
Major: Communications

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Elliot Dryoff

Elliot Dryoff

General Council Member

Hometown: Vail, Colorado

| Class of 2026 | Major: Communications

Ellie isÌýinterested in ESG initiatives, specifically sustainable development as it pertains to commercial real estate. I have the most interest and experience in the multi-family and industrial asset classes.

Program Staff

Julia Turner

Julia Turner

Administrative Assistant



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Julia Turner

Julia Turner

Administrative Assistant

Board of Advisors

Bryce BlairÌý

Director; Pulte Homes, Regency Centers

Rodger Brown, MCAS '77

Managing Director, Preservation of Affordable HousingÌýÌý

Michael Corcoran, MCAS '86, P'15, '20

President, Corcoran Jennison Companies

Ìý

Karen Kelleher, MCAS '90

President, BlueHub Loan Fund

Carol Naughton

President and CEO, Purpose Built Communities

Darin Davidson

President, Inland Group

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Visiting Professionals

Kate Bennett

Kate Bennett

Corcoran Center Visiting Professional, Fall 2024



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Kate Bennett

Kate Bennett

Corcoran Center Visiting Professional, Fall 2024

Kate Bennett has worked in affordable housing development, policy and planning for more than 30Ìýyears, with a particular focus on public housing and neighborhood revitalization. She holds a Masters inÌýCity Planning from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Kate recently retired as Administrator and CEO of the Boston Housing Authority, where she worked forÌýover 25 years. She oversaw public housing and voucher programs that provide affordable housing forÌýover 25,000 households in and around the City of Boston. In her tenure at BHA, she was instrumental inÌýimplementing several strategic initiatives, including more than $2 billion in redevelopment initiativesÌýand capital upgrades; the creation of an asset management division to ensure long-term preservation ofÌýdeeply affordable units; development of the BHA’s green, healthy housing and sustainability programs;Ìýand expansion of resident empowerment and self-sufficiency initiatives.

Prior to coming to the Boston Housing Authority (BHA), Kate managed affordable housing programs forthe City of Chelsea and the City of Newton. She lives with her family in Roslindale.

Patrick Lee

Patrick Lee

Corcoran Center Visiting Professional, Fall 2023



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Patrick Lee

Patrick Lee

Corcoran Center Visiting Professional, Fall 2023

Patrick Lee is one of the founders and owners of Trinity Financial, Inc. and Trinity Management, LLC.Ìý Trinity Financial is a 32-year old development company, and with its management affiliate, Trinity Management, the two Trinity companies have more than 250 employees and central offices in Manhattan and Boston.Ìý The companies’ experience includes work developing more than 9,500 units of housing and 600,000 sf of commercial space, at a cost of over $3 billion.Ìý The two Trinity companies develop and manage affordable and market rate housing communities throughout the Northeast, from Massachusetts to New York.

Prior to co-founding Trinity Financial, Inc. in 1987, Mr. Lee served as Special Assistant to the Secretary of Administration and Finance for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Mr. Lee was the Secretary’s representative on a number of State boards and agencies including the Massachusetts Housing Finance Agency, Community Development Finance Corporation, Massachusetts Industrial Finance Agency, and the State’s Public Auditorium and Civic Center Grant Program. Mr. Lee has served as a member of the Board of Directors of the Massachusetts Government Land Bank, the Roxbury Neighborhood Council, the Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce, the Boston Center for the Arts, and Federated Dorchester Neighborhood Houses. He is currently a member of the Board of Trustees of Wellesley College and the Board of Overseers for the Boys and Girls Clubs of Boston.Ìý Mr. Lee holds a Bachelor’s degree from Harvard University and is a Massachusetts Institute of Technology-trained city planner.

William McLaughlin

William McLaughlin

Corcoran Center Visiting Professional, Fall 2023



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William McLaughlin

William McLaughlin

Corcoran Center Visiting Professional, Fall 2023

William M. McLaughlin retired from AvalonBay Communities, Inc. in 2021, serving most recently as the Executive Vice President of Development and construction. He had been with AvalonBay or its predecessor, Avalon Properties, Inc., since 1994.

He was responsible for all of AvalonBay’s construction activity nationally, and development activity on the East Coast. He was also a member of the Company’s Management Investment Committee. Before joining AvalonBay, Bill was with Lincoln Property Company for seven years, responsible for multifamily development and acquisitions in eastern New England.

He was the 2008 Chairman of the Greater Boston Real Estate Board (GBREB), was also the Chairman of GBREB’s Political Action Committee (PAC), and is a two-time past President of its Rental Housing Association (RHA, now MAA) division. Bill currently serves on Harvard Corporation’s Committee on Facilities and Capital Planning. He also serves on the Board of Directors at Caritas Communities (and is its Past Chair), the Board of Overseers at Newton Wellesley Hospital, and the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) Multifamily Leadership Board (Emeritus). He is a long-time member of the Newton Zoning Board of Appeals.

Bill received his Bachelor's degree in Economics from Harvard College.

Bill and his wife Linda split their time between Newton, MA, and Cape Cod, and they have six adult children and one grandson.

John Barros

John Barros

Corcoran Center Visiting Professional Spring 2022



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John Barros

John Barros

Corcoran Center Visiting Professional Spring 2022

John F. Barros is the Managing Principal of Cushman & Wakefield's Boston market. In this role, John leads all market activities and drives growth and business performance across a team of more than 180 professionals in Boston, MA, and Manchester, NH.

Before joining Cushman & Wakefield, John was appointed by the Mayor of Boston to serve as Chief of Economic Development from 2014 to 2021. John brought a passion for sustainable community development to this role while fostering economic inclusion and equity for all Bostonians. Before his appointment, John served 13 years as Executive Director of the Dudley Street Neighborhood Initiative (DSNI), where he successfully led a neighborhood revitalization. It focused on creating community wealth, producing permanent affordable housing, and establishing the country's most important urban community land trust. John has also held positions at the Chubb Group of Insurance Companies, providing insurance for initial public offerings for dot-com startups.

John received the inaugural Community Service Award from the Boston Day & Evening Academy in 2008, the Robert Leo Ruffin Award from the Archdiocese of Boston in 2004, and the Action for Boston Community Development Roxbury Community Award in 2000. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Dartmouth College in 1996 and a Masters in Public Policy from Tufts University in 2012. He also holds an Honorary Doctorate of Commerce Degree from Suffolk University.

Prior Years Corcoran Center Undergraduate Real Estate Council Presidents

2023-2024

Brigid Hanczor

Brigid Hanczor

MCAS '24
Co-President


After Ï㽶Ðã:
• Incoming Fund Management Analyst at R4 Capital

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Brigid Hanczor

Brigid Hanczor

MCAS '24

Co-President

| After Ï㽶Ðã: | • Incoming Fund Management Analyst at R4 Capital

Katia Barker

Katia Barker

MCAS '24
Co-President


After Ï㽶Ðã:
• Incoming Community Development Banking Analyst at JPMorgan Chase

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Katia Barker

Katia Barker

MCAS '24

Co-President

| After Ï㽶Ðã: | • Incoming Community Development Banking Analyst at JPMorgan Chase

About Joseph E. Corcoran

In Memoriam.Ìý1936–2020

The Corcoran Luncheon was held in the Heights Room at Corcoran Commons and the TREC Symposium was held in Robsham Theatre at Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts on November 6, 2014.Rose Lincoln Photo for Boston College

Joseph E. Corcoran left his mark on Boston College, the City of Boston, and the world as a compassionate and discerning man who made a monumental impact on housing equality. After graduating from Ï㽶Ðã with a degree in history in 1959, Joe founded the Corcoran Jennison Companies, which has developed more than $3.5 billion in property to date and is credited with pioneering the development and management of mixed-income housing. Inspired by his experience growing up in a socioeconomically diverse Dorchester neighborhood, as well as by the University’s Ignatian values, he devoted his life to creating housing opportunities and transforming underserved urban communities. He also worked tirelessly to further housing legislation in Massachusetts and he founded The American City Coalition (TACC), a Boston-based nonprofit that promotes neighborhood revitalization.

At Ï㽶Ðã, Joe served on the Board of Trustees and chaired the Building and Property Committee. For several years, he also taught a Real Estate and Urban Action course at the Carroll School of Management. His love for teaching was evident, and he eagerly encouraged his students to search for solutions to social and economic problems in the housing industry. Out of his passion and generosity grew the Joseph E. Corcoran Center for Real Estate and Urban Action, which he endowed in 2014. His legacy will live on with future generations of real estate professionals who seek not only a career but also the opportunity to improve lives through their work.

Joe Corcoran will be dearly missed, at Ï㽶Ðã as well as in the countless communities he’s touched. His dedication is a preeminent example of what Ï㽶Ðã strives to instill in all who find their way to the Heights: a desire to serve others, and the knowledge to do so effectively.

Joe Corcoran will be dearly missed, at Ï㽶Ðã as well as in the countless communities he’s touched. His dedication is a preeminent example of what Ï㽶Ðã strives to instill in all who find their way to the Heights: a desire to serve others, and the knowledge to do so effectively.


Partners

On-Campus Partners


On-Campus partners are Boston College schools, departments, offices, and centers that collaborate with the Corcoran Center on an ongoing basis.

  • Boston College School of Social Work
  • Carroll School of Management
  • Connell School of Nursing
  • Theater Department
  • Environmental Studies Program
  • Volunteer and Service Learning Center
  • 4Boston

Community Partners


The Corcoran Center engages with the community through ongoing partnerships with community groups, nonprofits, government agencies, and the business community.

  • Mattapan United
  • Mattapan Main Streets
  • MassHousing
  • MAPC


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