John McIlwain

John K. McIlwain is a senior resident fellow at the Urban Land Institute and holds the ULI/J. Ronald Terwilliger chair for housing. He is also chairman of the Center for Housing Policy, the research affiliate of the National Housing Conference.

McIlwain also served as senior managing director of the American Communities Fund for Fannie Mae, and was president and CEO of the Fannie Mae Foundation. Before joining Fannie Mae, he was a partner in the law firm of Powell, Goldstein, Frazer and Murphy. He served as executive assistant to the assistant secretary for housing at the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, and began his career at the Maine State Housing Authority.

McIlwain has a Bachelor's degree from Princeton University and a JD from New York University School of Law.

In a March 2005 Washington Post Letter to the Editor, McIlwain predicted that there was no real estate bubble to pop.[1] Two years later the United States housing bubble collapsed, prior to the financial crisis of 2007–2010.

Articles Written by John K. McIlwain

He never shied away from putting down his thoughts on writing, in which there are about 27 notable articles under his name.

Name of article Year of Publication Category Ref. [2]
Sandy and the Rising Tide: Responding to the Rise in Sea Levels November 06, 2012 Market Trends
Is Small Beautiful Again? The Sudden Interest in Micro-Apartments October 25, 2012 Infrastructure
Greening Senior Housing: Healthier Living and Healthier Finances June 06, 2012 Sustainability
The Great Recession: A Slayer of Sprawl April 05, 2012 Market Trends
Seniors—In Which Metro Regions Are They Living? February 23, 2012 Market Trends
Seniors—In Which Cities Are They Living? February 23, 2012 Market Trends
Fixing the Housing Markets: Three Proposals Residential/Multifamily January 30, 2012
The Rental Boost From Green Design January 04, 2012 Planning & Design
Writing Down Mortgage Principal December 16, 2011 Residential/Multifamily
The Surprisingly Simple Amenities that Help Urban Residents Age in Place December 07, 2011 Planning & Design
Suburbs, Cities, and Aging in Place August 17, 2011 Market Trends
Should the Administration Rent Its Growing Inventory of Foreclosed Homes? August 12, 2011 Market Trends
Suburbs 2.0: The Evolving American Suburbs June 01, 2011 Market Trends
Redefining Seniors’ Housing May 13, 2011 Development
Seniors and the New Senior Housing March 29, 2011 Residential/Multifamily
Gen Y and Housing Trends March 29, 2011 Industry Sectors
Homeownership: Deferring the Dream February 23, 2011 Market Trends
Reforming America’s Housing Finance Market: The Administration’s Proposal February 22, 2011 Industry Sectors
Who Are You Calling a Senior? January 06, 2011 Market Trends
QE2: Will It Save the U.S. Housing Industry? January 03, 201 Default Category
What Does the New Congress Mean for Housing Finance? December 08, 2010 Market Trends
Housing Gen Y: The Next Challenge for Cities November 23, 2010 Market Trends
Planned Communities: What Lies Ahead? November 10, 2010 Development
Is It Time for a Federal Moratorium on Foreclosures? October 14, 2010 Development
Next Generation Master Planned Communities – Planning for the New Homebuyers October 05, 2010 Development
It’s Not Over until It’s Over: Housing Finance after Dodd-Frank September 08, 2010 Market Trends
Reviewing Treasury’s August 17 Meeting Regarding the GSEs September 02, 2010 Capital Markets
Missing in Action: The Private Mortgage Market August 01, 2010 Capital Markets

References

  1. No Housing Bubble to Pop. (March 2, 2005). Washington Post. Retrieved 2011-08-22, from Washington Post.
  2. language=AUTHOR: JOHN McLLAIN. URBANLAND MAGAZINE. Retrieved 2019-01-17
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