Industry exec named director of UB’s real estate development program

Release Date: May 2, 2022

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“Matt brings both the industry expertise and interdisciplinary perspective required to elevate real estate development as a critical partner in our work on the evolution of future cities. ”
Robert G. Shibley, PhD, dean
University at Buffalo School of Architecture and Planning

BUFFALO, N.Y. — The University at Buffalo School of Architecture and Planning has added critical capacity in teaching, research and industry engagement for its Master of Science in Real Estate Development with the appointment of a program director.

Matthew Roland, an urban planner and real estate development professional with more than 20 years of industry experience, has assumed the newly created leadership role for the school’s growing real estate development program.

As assistant dean and clinical assistant professor in real estate development, Roland will provide administrative, teaching and industry engagement support for the MSRED, which launched in 2015 as SUNY’s only master’s degree in real estate development.

The program already has more than 60 alumni and has added dual degrees with a Master of Business Administration and an MS in finance, a forthcoming minor in real estate development and an advanced graduate certificate in affordable housing that will launch this fall.

Matthew Roland.

Matthew Roland, director of the real estate development program in UB's School of Architecture and Planning.

Roland comes to UB with diverse planning, economic development and real estate development experience through previous roles as a consultant to the U.S. Department of the Navy, as well as roles with the Clover Group, Hamister Group and Iskalo Development, working on real estate and planning projects across Western New York and in over 20 states. He holds a master of regional planning from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and a bachelor’s in urban studies from Cornell University.

In addition to his faculty position, Roland will work in partnership with school leadership to build enrollment and expand the program’s practice-based research in critical fields such as affordable housing and inclusive community development. 

Roland joins the program at a pivotal point in its growth and reinforces its alignment with the school’s core mission to advance a more equitable and sustainable built environment, according to Robert G. Shibley, PhD, dean of UB’s School of Architecture and Planning.

“From housing affordability and aging infrastructure to health disparities and the climate crisis, the challenges facing cities today require interdisciplinary solutions that engage the full scope of the built environment professions,” said Shibley, a SUNY Distinguished Professor. “Matt brings both the industry expertise and interdisciplinary perspective required to elevate real estate development as a critical partner in our work on the evolution of future cities.”

“I’m excited to apply my professional knowledge and experience to help students understand the fundamental real-world forces and complex interdisciplinary tradeoffs in real estate,” said Roland.

“With careful planning and design, along with better financial and economic policies, we can begin to address the inequalities created in the real estate industry, and help foster a more inclusive and sustainable pattern of development in the future.”

The MS in Real Estate Development is distinguished by its intensively interdisciplinary curriculum rooted in comprehensive study of the built environment. The three-semester, 48-credit-hour program includes courses on urban design, affordable housing, planning and development law, historic preservation, development financing, construction management, architectural design and economic development planning.

Meanwhile, the program’s “community-as-classroom” approach situates students in the surrounding city and region, where they conduct field work, explore the urban context, and engage with developers, city officials and community stakeholders. Designed for new and continuing real estate professionals, the program offers a signature “capstone studio” focused on an actual site in Buffalo with a client team and real-world project constraints.

Among Roland’s top priorities is building enrollment in the affordable housing certificate program, which is designed to prepare graduates to help cities balance rapid development with shortages in quality, affordable housing for all. The certificate program will offer students focused course offerings and independent research opportunities through the school’s Affordable Housing Initiative, which launched in 2018 to develop affordable housing prototypes, building methods and policies.

Roland said he is eager to engage industry leaders and community partners from Buffalo to New York City and beyond to expand experiential learning opportunities and enhance student professional development.

“With careful planning and design, along with better financial and economic policies, we can begin to address the inequalities created in the real estate industry, and help foster a more inclusive and sustainable pattern of development in the future,” Roland said.

Media Contact Information

Rachel Teaman
Communications Officer
School of Architecture and Planning
Tel: 716-829-3794
rmansour@buffalo.edu