Director of the Lewis White Real Estate Center at UMKC
Press Coverage: Ingram's Magazine, 2025
The Lewis White Real Estate Center at the University of Missouri-Kansas City's Henry W. Bloch School of Management is where the next generation of real estate professionals learns the fundamentals of the industry. Curriculum development, industry partnerships, student preparation, career placement. It is the pipeline that feeds the Kansas City real estate market with talent, and I am its director.
That appointment was not a retirement plan. It was a strategic decision to put the same knowledge that built The Nash Group into the hands of every student who walks through the door.
Why Academic Leadership Matters
There is a gap in real estate education that most programs do not address. Students learn finance. They learn valuation. They learn market analysis. What they often do not learn is how development actually happens in the real world: the politics, the community dynamics, the regulatory navigation, and the human judgment calls that determine whether a project succeeds or fails.
I have sat in classrooms where the professor teaches LIHTC as a financing mechanism using textbook examples. The students learn the formula, pass the exam, and enter the workforce without ever having seen what a real LIHTC application looks like, how a real community engagement meeting feels, or what happens when a contractor goes over budget on a real project.
I teach differently because I have lived differently. When I stand in front of a class and explain how a LIHTC capital stack works, I am not reciting from a textbook. I am describing deals I have structured. When I teach students about community engagement, I am drawing on decades of direct experience in neighborhoods where engagement meant the difference between a project that got built and one that got blocked. When I teach about government relations, I am sharing what I learned chairing the Planning, Zoning, and Economic Development Committee on the Kansas City Council.
The Lewis White Real Estate Center under my direction emphasizes this integration of theory and practice. Students study the academic foundations, but they also engage with real projects, real professionals, and real communities. The goal is to produce graduates who can walk into a development meeting on day one and add value.
The Bloch School Connection
The Henry W. Bloch School of Management is named after the co-founder of H&R Block, a man who built a global company from Kansas City. The school carries a tradition of practical, entrepreneurial business education. The Lewis White Real Estate Center extends that tradition into the real estate sector.
Our students come from diverse backgrounds. Some are pursuing careers in commercial development. Some are headed for investment and asset management. Some want to work in affordable housing or community development. Some are mid-career professionals adding real estate expertise to their existing skill sets through the Executive MBA program, where I also teach.
What they all share is access to a curriculum that connects classroom learning to market reality. Industry speakers. Project site visits. Mentorship from working professionals. And a director who has done the work, not just studied it.
What This Means For The Industry
The real estate industry needs better trained professionals. Not just technically proficient ones, but professionals who understand that development happens in communities and affects real people. The days when a developer could build whatever the numbers justified without considering community impact are over, if they ever existed.
The students we produce at the Lewis White Real Estate Center understand that development is a social activity. Capital allocation is important. Risk management is important. But so is understanding the neighborhood where you are building, listening to the people who live there, and designing projects that serve the community rather than just the investor.
That perspective is embedded in every course, every project, and every interaction at the center. It comes directly from 30 years of experience doing development in communities where getting it right was not optional.
The Through Line
Teaching and developing are not separate activities for me. They are the same activity applied at different scales. When I build housing in a neighborhood, I am investing in that community's future. When I teach a student how development works, I am investing in the industry's future. Both are necessary. Both require patience. And both produce returns that compound over time.
The Lewis White Real Estate Center is not a side project. It is core to the mission of The Nash Group because the problems we work on — affordable housing, community development, equitable transit — will outlast any individual project or career. Training the next generation to continue this work is as important as doing the work ourselves.
Ingram's covered my appointment as director in 2025 because it recognized what the appointment signified: a practitioner with three decades of experience was now shaping the curriculum that would produce the next generation of Kansas City's real estate leaders. That is influence that compounds.
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