ARTICLE
17 May 2024

How Real Estate Development Can Boost Urban Health

GS
Goulston & Storrs

Contributor

Goulston & Storrs is a full-service law firm known for its real estate, corporate, litigation, private client, and tax practices. We are home to nearly 250 attorneys practicing across multiple disciplines from offices in Boston, New York, and Washington DC.
Goulston & Storrs attorney Mattew Kiefer and environmental consultant Adele Houghton are advocates for a deeper understanding of the health impacts of real estate development.
United States Real Estate and Construction

Goulston & Storrs attorney Mattew Kiefer and environmental consultant Adele Houghton are advocates for a deeper understanding of the health impacts of real estate development.

In a recent article in the Stanford Social Innovation Review - "How Real Estate Development Can Booth Urban Health" - they suggest employing a public health approach known as health situation analysis to identify, assess, and tackle public health concerns in a context-specific way, particularly within vulnerable low-income and minority communities. Matthew and Adele believe that health situation analysis can transform the public approval process when applied to commercial real estate by prioritizing neighborhood health and well-being that resonates with local residents and community stakeholders.

Matthew and Adele recently joined The Sustainable City Podcast to elaborate on their ideas as to how real estate development can boost urban health. Listen here.

"Our approach can reorient value creation in real estate, from the property itself to a project's broader effects on the surrounding neighborhood. "

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