Real Estate Capital

Nancy Lashine

Real Estate Capital offers candid, one-on-one conversations with some of the most influential people in commercial real estate. Hosted by Nancy Lashine, Founder of Park Madison Partners, the show focuses on real estate investment and capital formation, with in-depth perspectives from some of the most respected decision makers in the institutional real estate community. You’ll learn about successful transactions, investment philosophies, innovative business strategies, real estate operations and technology, and the personal characteristics and skills that have propelled these individuals in their careers.

  1. 1 day ago

    2026 Midyear Outlook | Park Madison Partners Executive Committee

    Park Madison’s executive committee revisits its 2026 predictions and examines the trends shaping real estate for the rest of the year. Park Madison’s executive committee, Rob Kohn, Carrie Coulson, Jack Koch, Brian Di Salvo and John Sweeney, joins Nancy Lashine for a mid-year assessment of the firm's 2026 Outlook. The group examines which themes have played out as expected, where market conditions have shifted and what investors should watch during the second half of 2026. The discussion covers interest rates, fundraising, transaction volumes and the continued importance of distributions as institutional investors gradually return to the market.  [00:12:43, Carrie] “There’s a lot more scrutiny on how managers are actually creating value. . . . not just ‘Here’s my track record, here are my returns.’” That scrutiny extends to different asset classes as well. The team talks about why niche operating strategies continue to attract capital, how data centers are navigating growing pushback and why industrial assets with access to power are becoming increasingly valuable. They also question how immune the real estate industry is to developments in AI, especially given that people will always need a place to live, work and play. [00:17:50, Jack] “I do think just generally as an asset class, there is some protection given that we’re humans and we always physically need those three things.” The conversation reinforces that patient capital and operational expertise continue to separate durable investment strategies from opportunistic ones. Resources Park Madison Partners' website 2026 Outlook report

    39 min
  2. 17 Jun

    Brendan Wallace | Fifth Wall’s Co-Founder, CEO and CIO

    Brendan Wallace discusses how AI is reshaping real estate, venture capital and the future of PropTech. Brendan Wallace joins Nancy Lashine to discuss how generative and agentic AI are fundamentally changing the real estate industry for investors, operators and PropTech companies.  The conversation explores why traditional “point solution” software is no longer enough for real estate firms trying to stay competitive.  Brendan explains that companies now must integrate AI directly into their operations and decision-making infrastructure rather than treating technology as a separate IT support function. [00:14:18] “If you still conceptualize your business that way, as we have leasing and development and reporting and then tech over here, you've fully lost the plot because what matters to truly capture the value of generative agent AI is you can't think of it as technology. You have to think of it as business.” Brendan also discusses how AI is reshaping venture investing itself, compressing competitive advantages and increasing the concentration of returns among a small number of breakout companies.  He argues that firms that are hesitant to adapt will fall behind quickly as the industry undergoes a major transformation. [00:50:30] “Doing nothing around generative and agentic AI, not having a strategy, is an existential mistake at this point.” The episode also covers climate investing, global innovation ecosystems and why Brendan believes the next five years will bring more change to real estate management than the previous two decades combined. Links Brendan Wallace | LinkedIn Fifth Wall’s website

    52 min
  3. 3 Jun

    Brian Feldman | Compass Datacenters’ Vice President of Development

    Brian Feldman, Compass Datacenters’ Vice President of Development, discusses data center development, power procurement, and the future of digital infrastructure. Brian shares how unexpected opportunities early in his career led him to work with data centers. After graduating from Columbia’s business school, he joined Amazon Web Services’ (AWS) long-range planning team. At AWS, Brian was responsible for buying land for data centers and then procuring the power contract to energize it.  He learned that data center location primarily depends on what problem the business is trying to solve. Brian points out that use and sales tax incentives and varying data center governance laws across the U.S. play a key role in site selection, too. [00:15:06] “Data centers like to be next to other data centers [because] . . . [they] are all about interrelational databases and interrelational compute. . . . [T]hat means they can talk to each other almost instantaneously and really almost act like one greater facility.” Brian shares how much data centers permanently boost local economies. They employ thousands of people during construction—people who live, eat and spend money in the community. [00:43:40] “The construction cycle just continues. They're temporary jobs, but what people don't often realize is the level of permanence because these buildings do require constant upgrade and retrofit. And that's one, baked into the economics, and two, based [on] the lease terms.” While the data center boom eventually will slow down, Brian emphasizes that the industry’s fundamental drive is society’s demand for computational power. And things like phone use and the need to interpret data aren’t going anywhere soon. Links Brian Feldman | LinkedIn Compass Datacenters’ website

    1hr 3min
  4. 20 May

    Daniel McGill | Corporate Development & Infrastructure at Joby Aviation

    Daniel McGill of Joby Aviation shares how electric air transit and vertiports could reshape real estate value and development. Daniel McGill of Joby Aviation joins Nancy Lashine to explore how electric vertical takeoff and landing (eVTOL) aircraft could reshape the built environment.  With a background spanning Hines, Apple and institutional real estate, Daniel brings a practical lens to what it takes to introduce entirely new vertiport infrastructure into existing cities. [00:16:43] “Literally the way you pick up your phone to call an Uber Black to get to the airport or an event, now there's an option to pick up an aircraft to fly you to said destination.” He explains how landing pads on rooftops and underutilized spaces could become a powerful differentiator for assets, particularly as landlords look for new ways to drive demand and increase value. Daniel outlines how this technology could expand where people choose to live and work, unlocking new geographies by dramatically reducing commute times. He emphasizes that adoption will take time and intentionality, pointing to Waymo’s rollout of its self-driving cars as an example to follow. [00:31:30] “It requires patience. . . . We need to be early and often engaging with the community.” Daniel highlights how forward-thinking real estate owners can position themselves at the forefront of a new mobility paradigm. He goes further than predicting the future of transportation and real estate by giving a glimpse into what is already on the cutting edge. Links Daniel McGill | LinkedIn Joby Aviation | Website

    49 min
  5. 29 Apr

    Anthony Scaramucci | Founder of SkyBridge Capital & SALT

    Anthony Scaramucci, founder of SkyBridge and SALT, speaks on resilience, manager selection and what tokenization could mean for real estate. Anthony Scaramucci, founder of SkyBridge and SALT, reflects on the early lessons in resilience he learned from his parents. They worked as a makeup artist and a laborer and instilled in him a strong work ethic and a love of people. He shares that his high school guidance counselor had a significant influence on him, too. Without his encouragement, Anthony wouldn’t have gone to Tufts and might not be where he is today. [00:10:36] “You need people to help you. . . . You gotta go through your rite of passage and you don't have to be embarrassed about it.” Anthony shares how his career has evolved and how he learned from his failures as well as successes. When COVID lasted longer than expected, Anthony stuck to playing the long game. [00:16:02] “Everybody's a long-term investor until they have short-term losses. . . . We made a decision, which turned out to be one of the better decisions actually: we pivoted the business into digital assets and started buying bitcoin.” Anthony is full of knowledge and experience. He speaks about stagflation, the possibility of AI productivity lowering interest rates and the factors at play in foreign investors’ willingness to invest in America. Links Anthony Scaramucci | LinkedIn SkyBridge Capital’s website SALT’s website

    56 min
  6. 1 Apr

    Laurent Grill | Partner at JLL Spark

    Laurent Grill, JLL Spark’s Partner and Managing Member, shares how founder experience shapes venture investing and where AI is transforming real estate. Laurent Grill, JLL Spark’s Partner and Managing Member, joins Nancy Lashine to explore how a founder-first mindset is shaping venture capital in real estate technology.  Laurent is unique in the proptech space. He’s been a founder multiple times — he even did a stint on Shark Tank — and now deploys capital into early-stage proptech companies to transform the way the built environment works. He explains that in competitive markets, success often comes down to differentiation at the founder level. [00:32:52] “When you're sitting down in front of a founder, sometimes you just have to ask the question of like, why you? Why you, why your team? What is different about your business and you personally that's actually gonna give you a chance of success in this market?” That perspective carries into JLL Spark’s venture capital strategy: real-world industry pain points and measurable ROI guide investments. Laurent also reflects on the evolution of proptech, the rise of AI as core infrastructure, and what an “AI-native” building could look like. [00:55:32] “AI is . . . not a product, it's a core infrastructure. . . . This is now the fundamental infrastructure of what technology looks like.”  From operational efficiency to construction innovation, Laurent outlines what it means to put people before the product, where technology is reshaping the built environment and where the investment opportunities are. Links Laurent Grill | LinkedIn JLL Spark’s website

    58 min

About

Real Estate Capital offers candid, one-on-one conversations with some of the most influential people in commercial real estate. Hosted by Nancy Lashine, Founder of Park Madison Partners, the show focuses on real estate investment and capital formation, with in-depth perspectives from some of the most respected decision makers in the institutional real estate community. You’ll learn about successful transactions, investment philosophies, innovative business strategies, real estate operations and technology, and the personal characteristics and skills that have propelled these individuals in their careers.

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