Search
 Texas Business

Texas Real Estate

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Home

Texas Business

Texas Real Estate

Trammell Crow: A Legacy in Real Estate Innovation

Trammell Crow: A Legacy in Real Estate Innovation
Email a friendEmailView larger imageZoom

Trammell Crow: A Legacy in Real Estate Innovation

 
SKU:  

ACOMMP2_book_usedlikenew_0874209358

In Stock
Availability:   Usually ships in 1 business days
Only 2 left in stock, order soon!
 
 

Based on interviews with colleagues, friends, and enemies, this biography tells the story of how a man without money, experience, or connections became a real estate legend. A visionary and risk taker, Trammell Crow is presented in the book as the pioneer of speculative real estate development, noted for spawning a generation of industry leaders.

 
Our Price: $34.95 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping.
 
 

Note: Item may be sold and shipped by another company. Learn more.


Product Details
Author:Willam Bragg Ewald Jr.
Hardcover:219 pages
Publisher:Urban Land Institute
Publication Date:April 01, 2005
Language:English
ISBN:0874209358
Product Length:10.4 inches
Product Width:7.36 inches
Product Height:0.88 inches
Product Weight:1.5 pounds
Package Length:10.43 inches
Package Width:7.28 inches
Package Height:1.18 inches
Package Weight:1.54 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 1 reviews

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:1.0 ( 1 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

21 of 23 found the following review helpful:


1Blatantly superficial and written like 8th grader  Aug 21, 2006 By Atherton Reader
Characteristic of authorized biographies, the reader quickly realizes that Crow's involvement was concerted and leads to a contrived book -- inspite of the author's claim in the Preface: "When Trammell asked me to write this book, I said that, to me, business histories usually fall into two types: sanitized, self-serving, documents blue-penciled by the company, and documents in which the author, unfettered, calls the facts as he sees them. 'What kind do you want?' [asked Crow] 'The second.' [answered the author]"

If the author chose the second, then he lacks the sophistication to follow-thru with that grand stand. On pg 3, he describes Crow's mother "... was a saint, tall, and beautiful, with such penetrating eyes..." Those are kind words for a woman he never met! Or on pg 39 concerning McFadden and Miller who were Crow's early general contractors, "over the long years of their association, they never had a disagreement." Even if we assume there were no lawsuits, the reader is left in disbelief. If the author just illustrated more through examples of this critical relationship, Crow's character would've been better portrayed and the objectivity and thoroughness of research more convincing.

The author fails to demonstrate any financial or business acumen when discussing Crow's projects or deal-making. On pgs 39-40, he describes Crow's first deal on Cole Street with rent "about 60 cents a square foot" and constructed "at four dollars a square foot". The reader can only question: 60 cents "per year"? construction cost includes financing? Land cost was diminished? How much leverage? What did McFadden and Miller make? Moreover, the round numbers and an implied 15% cap-rate in industrial properties (even then), only cause the reader to question the seriousness with which the author analyzes his subject and his understanding of real estate investment.

On pg 46, he lists 11 do/don't of the Crow Way. #5 states: "Depreciate enough to wipe out your income tax..." Then, #7 states: "Pay off debt out of income." This illustrates the sloppy writing of the author. Depreciation is a required accounting method, so there is no such thing as "enough", but what he probably meant to say is that Crow applied Accelerated Depreciate Rates as much as possible and did aggressive Cost Segregation on fixtures and fittings. If Depreciation wipes out income tax, then there would be no "income" to pay off debt... so what the author probably meant there was Net Cash Flow, Free Cash Flow, or Funds from Operations. Even if the author isn't a CPA, again, poor research leads to sloppy writing.

Regarding the two "types", the vast majority of biographies and business histories fall between these two extremes. And, good books are not simply black/white portraits. This book's simple depiction is demonstrative of the author's lack of and disregard for subtlies within Crow's life and overall story. This book is a mixture of verbalized spoon-fed recollections from Crow, anecdotal stories about business history, homespun 8th-grader-level simple writing style, and fairly poor business analysis. It is unfortunate because Trammell Crow must have a better story to tell and more colorful life to learn from. Don't buy this book.



 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 About UsContact Us
TexanVIP.comEquestrianVIP.comCowboyVIP.comFarmingVIP.comFishingVIP.comCountryMusicVIP.comChrisSparksEntertainment.com