Skip to content ↓

$118M gift from MIT alumnus will advance socially responsible and sustainable real estate development

Samuel Tak Lee MIT Real Estate Entrepreneurship Lab to include focus on China.
Press Inquiries

Press Contact:

Kimberly Allen
Phone: 617-253-2702
Fax: 617-258-8762
MIT News Office

Media Download

Samuel Tak Lee '62, SM '64 (standing, left) and MIT President L. Rafael Reif look on as Lee's son, Samathur Li, and MIT Executive Vice President and Treasurer Israel Ruiz sign documents related to Lee's $118 million gift to MIT.
Download Image
Caption: Samuel Tak Lee '62, SM '64 (standing, left) and MIT President L. Rafael Reif look on as Lee's son, Samathur Li, and MIT Executive Vice President and Treasurer Israel Ruiz sign documents related to Lee's $118 million gift to MIT.
Credits: Bryce Vickmark
MIT President L. Rafael Reif shakes hands with Samuel Tak Lee at the signing ceremony formalizing Lee's gift to MIT. The gift will create a new Samuel Tak Lee MIT Real Estate Entrepreneurship Lab and result in the renaming of MIT's Building 9 as the Samuel Tak Lee Building.
Download Image
Caption: MIT President L. Rafael Reif shakes hands with Samuel Tak Lee at the signing ceremony formalizing Lee's gift to MIT. The gift will create a new Samuel Tak Lee MIT Real Estate Entrepreneurship Lab and result in the renaming of MIT's Building 9 as the Samuel Tak Lee Building.
Credits: Bryce Vickmark
MIT President L. Rafael Reif greets Samathur Li (center) and Samuel Tak Lee at Gray House, where the signing ceremony was held.
Download Image
Caption: MIT President L. Rafael Reif greets Samathur Li (center) and Samuel Tak Lee at Gray House, where the signing ceremony was held.
Credits: Bryce Vickmark

*Terms of Use:

Images for download on the MIT News office website are made available to non-commercial entities, press and the general public under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives license. You may not alter the images provided, other than to crop them to size. A credit line must be used when reproducing images; if one is not provided below, credit the images to "MIT."

Close
Samuel Tak Lee '62, SM '64 (standing, left) and MIT President L. Rafael Reif look on as Lee's son, Samathur Li, and MIT Executive Vice President and Treasurer Israel Ruiz sign documents related to Lee's $118 million gift to MIT.
Caption:
Samuel Tak Lee '62, SM '64 (standing, left) and MIT President L. Rafael Reif look on as Lee's son, Samathur Li, and MIT Executive Vice President and Treasurer Israel Ruiz sign documents related to Lee's $118 million gift to MIT.
Credits:
Bryce Vickmark
MIT President L. Rafael Reif shakes hands with Samuel Tak Lee at the signing ceremony formalizing Lee's gift to MIT. The gift will create a new Samuel Tak Lee MIT Real Estate Entrepreneurship Lab and result in the renaming of MIT's Building 9 as the Samuel Tak Lee Building.
Caption:
MIT President L. Rafael Reif shakes hands with Samuel Tak Lee at the signing ceremony formalizing Lee's gift to MIT. The gift will create a new Samuel Tak Lee MIT Real Estate Entrepreneurship Lab and result in the renaming of MIT's Building 9 as the Samuel Tak Lee Building.
Credits:
Bryce Vickmark
MIT President L. Rafael Reif and Christine Reif toast Samuel Tak Lee at the signing ceremony formalizing Lee's $118 million gift to MIT.
Caption:
MIT President L. Rafael Reif and Christine Reif toast Samuel Tak Lee at the signing ceremony formalizing Lee's $118 million gift to MIT.
Credits:
Bryce Vickmark
MIT President L. Rafael Reif greets Samathur Li (center) and Samuel Tak Lee at Gray House, where the signing ceremony was held.
Caption:
MIT President L. Rafael Reif greets Samathur Li (center) and Samuel Tak Lee at Gray House, where the signing ceremony was held.
Credits:
Bryce Vickmark

MIT has received one of the largest gifts in its history, from alumnus Samuel Tak Lee ’62, SM ’64, to establish a real estate entrepreneurship lab that will promote social responsibility among entrepreneurs and academics in the real estate profession worldwide, with a particular focus on China. The gift will fund fellowships to attract both U.S. and international students; will support research on sustainable real estate development and global urbanization; and will make the lab’s curriculum available online to learners worldwide via MITx.

The $118 million gift was formalized yesterday at a signing ceremony at MIT, attended by Lee; his son, Samathur Li; MIT President L. Rafael Reif; Executive Vice President and Treasurer Israel Ruiz; Chancellor for Academic Advancement Eric Grimson; and Vice President for Resource Development Julie Lucas. In recognition of Lee’s substantial and ongoing commitment to the Institute, Building 9, home to the MIT Center for Real Estate, will be named the Samuel Tak Lee Building.

“With this gift, Sam Lee aims to tap the transformative power of real estate to shape the built environment, and thereby to shape society and culture, to enrich our shared civic life, to increase our harmony with nature — in short, to make a significant positive impact on the world,” Reif says. “As MIT strives to work for the betterment of humankind, Sam’s generosity dramatically increases our capacity to create and inspire far-reaching positive change. We are deeply grateful for the vision and partnership of the Lee family, and for the trust they have placed in MIT.”

Lee says his gift was motivated by a desire to design a program with MIT that tightly ties the study of real estate to 21st-century realities such as land reform, environmental challenges, burgeoning populations, and an evolving global economy.

“This is a period of tremendous change and opportunity for entrepreneurs in China and around the world,” Lee says. “By cultivating a long-term perspective, real estate professionals can create even greater value for themselves and for society based on responsible, sustainable strategies. I am eager to connect ambitious, talented students with the skills and knowledge that will help them succeed.”

The new Samuel Tak Lee MIT Real Estate Entrepreneurship Lab will be housed in MIT’s Department of Urban Studies and Planning (DUSP) and the Center for Real Estate (CRE). The CRE investigates the real estate transaction from initial concept to market reality through a cross-disciplinary lens, including design, urban planning, environmental studies, construction, management, economics, finance, policy and regulation, and the law. MIT is a pioneer in the study of real estate, becoming the first university to offer a Master of Science degree in real estate development in 1983.

“Real estate is inherently interdisciplinary, and so is the culture of MIT,” Grimson says. “Whether turning its attention to the role of real estate in fostering prosperity, the design of cities, or the consumption of energy, this new lab will be strengthened by interactions with departments and programs across MIT.”

The lab’s professors and students, Grimson says, will seek partners within the School of Architecture and Planning — such as the Center for Advanced Urbanism, the Media Lab, and the Building Technology Program — as well as from the MIT Sloan School of Management, and from such MIT departments as civil and environmental engineering, materials science and engineering, economics, anthropology, and others that share an interest in responsible real estate development.

While preliminary work with respect to the Samuel Tak Lee MIT Real Estate Entrepreneurship Lab will begin immediately, formal program activities will commence in the 2015-16 academic year under the leadership of an endowed faculty chair and an administrative director, still to be announced. The gift will also establish a “Think Tank” and a research fund to ensure MIT’s continued commitment to research and thought leadership in sustainable and socially responsible real estate development and global urbanization. Some of the topics and projects that the lab will focus on include: development and urbanization through private action and entrepreneurship; urban resilience and adaptation; land-use reform regulations and codes; new construction materials; data and technology; affordable housing; and environmental aspects of urban growth and development.

According to Albert Saiz, the director of the MIT Center for Real Estate, the lab will explore questions of social responsibility — ranging from the individual’s obligations to society to the impact of the built environment on the natural environment — that are essential to how CRE prepares its students to operate in a complex global market.

“We want our graduates to become catalysts for profitable development around the world,” says Saiz, who is the Daniel Rose Associate Professor of Urban Economics and Real Estate. “At the same time, we believe the real estate profession must develop nuanced solutions to global concerns such as environmental change, population growth, and transforming economies.”

The Samuel Tak Lee MIT Real Estate Entrepreneurship Lab will attract top research talent from around MIT and beyond, Saiz notes. “The lab’s graduate students, visiting scholars, and practitioners will also become a leading global community for the development of successful models of sustainable real estate,” he says. “And the lab’s educational program will inspire a new generation of socially conscious and knowledgeable citizens and entrepreneurs.”

Accordingly, the lab will emphasize both the practical — for example, developing new case studies, the major component of a CRE and DUSP education — and the global, focusing on the rapidly changing real estate practice in China.

“Deepening our understanding of development in China through the Samuel Tak Lee MIT Real Estate Entrepreneurship Lab has the potential to inform our broader outlook on urbanization, city planning, and design,” says Eran Ben-Joseph, professor and head of MIT’s Department of Urban Studies and Planning. Ben-Joseph says that DUSP’s extensive history in China — such as the Beijing Urban Design Studio, a summer exchange between MIT and Tsinghua University that dates back to 1984 — will give the lab a running start.

“The issues that create complexity in Chinese real estate, such as migration, land ownership, and environmental impacts, make it a fertile area for research and practice,” Ben-Joseph says. “Lessons learned from China can serve as models worldwide.”

The gift will provide fellowships to attract graduate students of diverse geographic, social, and economic origins to study real estate entrepreneurship on MIT’s campus, with an emphasis on students from China. And MITx will share the lab’s curriculum with a global audience by translating its content to massive open online courses.

“Throughout China — and all over the world — there are talented young people with a strong capacity to take individual initiative,” Lee says. “My hope is that by offering them MIT-level tools and perspectives, the lab will empower students from all backgrounds to take their place among the next generation of global real estate entrepreneurs.”

Lee received two degrees from MIT: a bachelor’s degree in 1962 and a master’s degree in 1964, both in civil and environmental engineering. After graduating from MIT, he joined Prudential Enterprise, a Hong Kong–based real estate company founded by his father and a cousin. Under Lee’s leadership in the following decades, Prudential has grown into a multinational firm with significant holdings in Hong Kong, England, Japan, Switzerland, and Singapore. Lee is widely known for his 1994 acquisition and development of the Langham Estate in London’s West End, approximately 14 acres of commercial space that is now a major business and shopping destination.

Press Mentions

Cambridge Chronicle

The Cambridge Chronicle reports that alumnus Samuel Tak Lee has donated $118 million to establish a real estate entrepreneurship lab at MIT. The lab will have a particular focus on China, and “will promote social responsibility among entrepreneurs and academics in the real estate profession worldwide.”

The Tech

Tech reporter Amy Wang writes about the recent gift from alumnus Samuel Tak Lee that will establish a real estate entrepreneurship lab at MIT. “Real estate and urban planning is very interdisciplinary to begin with, so this donation already is incredibly well positioned to generate opportunities across all fields,” says Prof. Albert Saiz. 

Forbes

Robert Olsen of Forbes profiles MIT alumnus Samuel Tak Lee, who recently made one of the largest gifts in MIT’s history to establish a real estate entrepreneurship lab. “Now that he’s achieved such success, he’s helping others to follow a similar path by supporting the schools he attended,” writes Olsen. 

Inside Higher Ed

Inside Higher Ed reports on the $118 million gift from MIT alumnus Samuel Tak Lee that will be used to establish a real estate entrepreneurship lab at MIT. The gift, one of the largest in MIT’s history, is aimed at exploring sustainability and social responsibility in the field of real estate. 

Associated Press

One of the largest gifts in MIT's history will be used to “advance socially responsible and sustainable real estate, with a focus on China,” the Associated Press reports. The gift, from alumnus Samuel Tak Lee, will be used to establish a lab for sustainable real estate development, fund student fellowships, and put the lab’s curriculum online. 

BostInno

BostInno reporter Lauren Landry writes that MIT has received one of the largest gifts in the school’s history from alumnus Samuel Tak Lee. The gift will be used to create a lab dedicated to socially responsible and sustainable real estate development, with a focus on China.  

Boston Globe

Jack Newsham writes for The Boston Globe about the new gift from MIT alumnus Samuel Tak Lee to “fund the study of sustainable real estate development” through the creation of a new lab at MIT. The lab will have a focus on China, “a country where the real estate sector is rapidly changing.”

Bloomberg

A gift from alumnus Samuel Tak Lee will be used to establish a new MIT lab for sustainable real estate development, reports Chris Staiti of Bloomberg News. The gift will “help design a program that ties the study of real estate to 21st-century realities.”

Related Links

Related Topics

Related Articles

More MIT News