New faculty join the Fitzgerald Institute for Real Estate
The Fitzgerald Institute for Real Estate has added nine new Notre Dame faculty and staff to their list of faculty fellows and adjunct professors.
The Fitzgerald Institute for Real Estate has added nine new Notre Dame faculty and staff to their list of faculty fellows and adjunct professors.
Hope Swantko, a second-year law student, and Jenna Wilson, a third-year law student, are two of 28 graduate and professional students to receive merit-based scholarships for the 2021-2022 academic year.
Ten undergraduate student teams competed in a new University of Notre Dame real estate case competition over the 2020-2021 Winter Session.
The cohort will include students with bachelor’s degrees from 12 different departments across the College of Arts and Letters, College of Science, Mendoza College of Business, and the School of Architecture.
David Murphy is working with the Fitzgerald Institute for Real Estate to address the real estate challenges and opportunities that the Catholic Church faces in the U.S.
The Fitzgerald Institute for Real Estate has teamed with the Hesburgh Libraries’ Thomas Mahaffey, Jr. Business Library to advance real estate training, education, and research at Notre Dame.
Lenny Den—who double majors in finance and applied computational mathematics and statistics with a minor in real estate—is one of just 10 recipients from around the world for this year’s PREA Scholarship program.
Given Italy is prone to seismic activity, determining how to prioritize the protection of buildings can be complicated. Notre Dame researchers are helping Italian dioceses tackle this problem by completing a seismic risk assessment of 72 churches throughout the country.
On Friday, October 11, 2019, those interested in learning about global real estate and the new Fitzgerald Institute for Real Estate are invited to attend the Fitzgerald Institute’s inaugural fall gathering. Held in Corbett Family Hall, the event will feature...
The research team found that although coastal homeowners may perceive a worsening of climate change-related hazards, these attitudes are largely unrelated to a homeowner’s expectations of actual home damage.