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Real estate honchos pass power to sons-in-law

From left: Jerry Speyer and Peter Malkin
From left: Jerry Speyer and Peter Malkin

Power in real estate typically gets handed down from the father to the son. But in some high-profile cases, it’s the sons-in-law who assume the throne.

At the mighty landlord Tishman Speyer, for example, Jerry Speyer joined the company in the 1960s as a vice-president, working for his father-in-law Bob Tishman. But it was apparent from the day he joined that he was the heir apparent, the Wall Street Journal reported. Similarly, Peter Malkin was the right-hand man of his father-in-law Lawrence Wien for several years before he assumed control of the company whose holdings include the Empire State Building, after Wien’s death in 1988.

And at Greenwich, Conn.-based Urstadt Biddle, a developer specializing in retail property, current chief executive Willing Biddle was given a talk by his father-in-law Charles Urstadt about “the birds and the bees” when he joined the firm in 1987, he told the Journal.

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The queen bees are top dogs such as Harry Helmsley and Larry Silverstein, Biddle recalled his father-in-law saying. The drones are their employees and the worker bees are brokers and consultants. A true entrepreneur wants to be a queen bee, Urstadt said.

This June, after working in positions of increasing prominence over the years, Biddle was made CEO when Urstadt stepped down.

“Now I’m a queen bee,” Biddle told the Journal. [WSJ]  – Hiten Samtani

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