About Me
Jerrod Delaine is an experienced Real Estate Developer, with a skill set that includes Design, Construction, Finance, Affordable Housing, and Asset Management. Jerrod is currently the Director of Development at a Harlem based real estate development company, Carthage Real Estate Advisors. The firm focuses on workforce housing in urban communities in the New York City area. His current focus is utilizing access to capital markets, improving communities through real estate finance and development. Jerrod has been in the real estate development sphere for 10 years. Jerrod spent the first five years of his career at Forum Architecture and Interior Design, the majority of his efforts focused on project managing affordable housing projects in the southeast region of the United States. Jerrod has a Bachelors Degree and Bachelors of Arts Degree in Architecture from Florida A & M University School of Architecture and Environmental Technology. He has a Master of Science degree from New York University Schack Institute of Real Estate.
Featured In
- Bloomberg
- Architectural Record
- Commercial Observer
- The Real Deal
Memberships
- Real Estate Executive Council
- National Multifamily Housing Council
- Urban Land Institute
- New York State Association for Affordable Housing
- Black Developers Forum
- New York Real Estate Council
- National Realty Club
- New York Alumni Chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity Inc
Adapting Historic Districts for an Equitable Future: SoHo/NoHo Case Study – 03.19.2021
Fall 2020 Faculty Seminar Series – The State of Affordable Housing Post 2020 Election
The State of Affordable Housing Post 2020 Election Professor Brian Schwagerl & Adjunct Professor Jerrod Delaine Panelists: - Thomas Campbell, Managing Member, Thorobird Companies - Isaac Henderson, Managing Director, L&M Development Partners
What Worked, What Didn’t for CRE Pros Working Remotely
When the novel coronavirus pandemic forced all two dozen workers at David Eyzenberg’s eponymous real estate investment bank to work remotely, its founder and president was quietly pleased—at least at first. Work was getting done. Technology—email, Microsoft Teams and...