David Belt

David Belt
Born David Eric Belt
(1967-06-29) June 29, 1967
Trenton, New Jersey, U.S.
Residence Brooklyn, New York, U.S.
Alma mater George School
Occupation Founder and Managing Principal of Macro Sea, New Lab, DBI Projects, and DBI Construction Consultants
Known for Real estate development, Urban renewal, Urban design, Architecture
Home town Yardley, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Board member of Neighborhood Trust Financial Partners

David Eric Belt (born June 29, 1967) is an American-born international real estate developer and entrepreneur. He is the founder and managing principal of Macro Sea,[1] New Lab,[2] and DBI Projects.[3] Belt and his firms are known for undertaking creative projects that repurpose pre-existing objects and municipal or commercial spaces. Belt and Macro Sea received substantial coverage in the media during 2015 for their role in revitalizing the Brooklyn Navy Yard.[4][5][6][7]

Early life

Belt was born in 1967 in Trenton, New Jersey, and grew up in Yardley, Pennsylvania, a suburb of Philadelphia. He is the oldest of two children. Belt attended grade school in Bucks County, Pennsylvania and later the George School. His younger brother Jonny Belt is an Emmy Award winning show creator for Nickelodeon.[8]

Career

Belt began his career in San Francisco working in construction as a laborer. A major fire in the Berkeley Hills presented an opportunity for him to begin taking on larger project management roles with the UMB Corporation. He later met Lee Saylor who hired him and served as a mentor. Soon Belt began running large projects including the New International Terminal at the San Francisco International Airport.[9] In 1999, Belt returned to the East Coast.

A through line of Belt's career has been attention to projects of particular social relevance.[10] His endeavors tend to include renovations of at-risk properties, repurposing of abandoned spaces, and public art projects that showcase new ways to think about public objects or urban design problems.In conjunction with an entrepreneurial ability to either position his own companies or set up new entities around those projects, Belt is said to have "turned real estate into a creative practice."[11]

Though he has been referred to as an artist, community activist, or architect, Belt stated in a March 14, 2014, lecture at the University of Michigan that he denies these titles for himself and prefers to contextualize his work as being that of a real estate developer.[12] In interviews, when asked about his resistance to adopting a more traditionally creative title, he espouses a more dynamic understanding of the role of a developer as someone "who should care about design."[13]

Current projects

New Lab

Front view artist's rendering of New Lab slated to open June 2016.

Belt and co-founder Scott Cohen are currently developing New Lab, a design and new manufacturing habitat for hardware-centric companies in Building 128 of the Brooklyn Navy Yard. The project is a repurposing of an abandoned shipbuilding facility that built most of the major ships during WW1 and WW2. New Lab is slated to open in June 2016, and is the result of a public-private partnership with the City of New York.

The organizing principle of the project is to provide a place that fosters designers, engineers, and entrepreneurs who are hardware and product focused.[14] The 84,000 sq. ft. structure will provide an interdisciplinary setting for companies and individuals working in product design, material science, biology, industrial design, and physical computing. Prior to opening, many members who will move into Building 128 are working in a Beta Space in the Navy Yard and in Red Hook. Early members include Honeybee Robotics, Nanotronics Imaging, 10x Beta, Spuni, RockPaperRobot, Terreform ONE, The Living, D.N.I., Eco Systems, NEA Studio, Jenna Spevack Studio, The Extrapolation Factory, Eric Forman Studio, Zago, Itemology, and others.

G27 Global Institute

G27 is a "design-centric"[15] residence for study-abroad students in Berlin, Germany.[16] The project is unique in that it is an attempt to change the current design paradigm of student housing as it is, according to Belt, "one of the most overlooked and under-explored design disciplines. At its best, it's institutional and sterile and at its worst is confined to dilapidated couches and condescending amenities."[17]

In line with Belt's tendency to seek out buildings that have a history with which the project he's undertaking will resonate, Macro Sea identified the former Roka manufacturing complex in Berlin for the project. In order to realize their vision, Macro Sea and DBI gutted and renovated the 85,000 sq. ft. complex and courtyard. Roka's facility would be transformed into "a five-story front building located at 27 Gneisenaustrasse, home to future administrative offices and faculty apartments, and a large six-story factory building set back from the street and separated by a magnificent tree-lined interior courtyard."[18] G27 opened for the Fall 2015 semester and has been leased to the Council on International Educational Exchange.

Enterprises

Belt has initiated business entities to develop, oversee and raise money for his projects: Macro Sea, DBI Projects, and DBI Construction Consultants. Each of his companies perform discrete design, project development, development management, and consultancy functions on projects that vary widely in size, scope, and location.

Macro Sea

In 2009, Belt started Macro Sea out of a need he identified for "execut[ing] forward-thinking projects that were outside the scope of a typical real estate development firm." He says, "Macro Sea's main focus has been on both developing creative interim-use projects that we believe transform and energize our surroundings, and on constructing permanent developments that provoke meaningful conversations and function as community incubators." [17] Macro Sea exists as a series of ongoing collaborations between experts in a wide variety of disciplines including lawyers, artists, architects, designers and others. The company has served as the entrepreneurial framework for most of Belt's development pursuits since 2009.

DBI Projects

DBI Projects is currently overseeing the renovation of the Chelsea Hotel.

In 2002, Belt formed DBI Construction Consultants. DBI Projects was formed as a distinct entity in 2015. Since its inception the firm has provided project management, development management, and real estate advisory services for a number of high-profile projects in New York City, Europe, Latin America, and South America. According to the firm's website, DBI Projects is "a multi-disciplinary construction consulting real estate development and project management firm that provides services to a diverse client base that includes global insurance carriers, real estate owners, institutions, and not-for-profit groups." [19] Since it began in 2002 the firm has developed over 1.8 billion in projects and currently has 948 million under development (1.3 million in square footage).[20]

DBI Projects is acting as construction project manager for the World Trade Center Performing Arts Center,[21] the Chelsea Hotel, Charter School projects, and recently completed the transformation of St. Ann's Warehouse, an 1860 tobacco warehouse beneath the Brooklyn Bridge in DUMBO, into a non-profit performing arts institution.[22]

DBI Construction Consultants

Belt formed DBI Construction Consultants in 2002. According to the firm's official website, the consultancy exists to provide "accurate and objective loss measurements for construction related insurance claims of all sizes. Our assignments range from complex projects spanning entire states to damage on single high-end apartments. Since 2002, we have helped resolve over $10 billion in claims. Our detailed assessments allow clients to settle claims promptly and fairly." [23]

Personal life

Belt lives in Brooklyn, New York. He has served on a number of boards and donated pro bono services to a number of charitable, philanthropic and artistic organizations including The Robin Hood Foundation,[24] Bread and Life, Rooftop Films, Downtown Brooklyn Partnership, St. Ann's Warehouse, and Neighborhood Trust Financial Partners.[25]

References

  1. "Macro Sea Team Members". macro-sea.com. Retrieved 2015-09-25.
  2. "About". New Lab. Retrieved 2015-10-08.
  3. "People DBI Construction Consultants". cc.dbinyc.com. Retrieved 2015-09-25.
  4. Mcgeehan, Patrick (2013-05-08). "Brooklyn Navy Yard Is Home to Manufacturing Cooperative". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2015-10-01.
  5. Clifford, Catherine. "From Relic to Beacon: Brooklyn Navy Yard Gets New Life as Cutting-Edge Manufacturing Hub". Retrieved 2015-10-01.
  6. "A Manufacturing Renaissance at the Brooklyn Navy Yard". Retrieved 2015-10-01.
  7. "Design Brooklyn". Design Brooklyn. Retrieved 2015-10-01.
  8. "Jonny Belt". IMDb. Retrieved 2015-09-25.
  9. "Leland Saylor Associates". www.lelandsaylor.com. Retrieved 2015-09-25.
  10. "Macro Sea — About". macro-sea.com. Retrieved 2015-10-01.
  11. "The Innovator: Interview with David Belt of Macro Sea | Artinfo". Retrieved 2015-10-01.
  12. David Belt – One Thing Leads to Another, retrieved 2015-09-25
  13. "The Innovator: Interview with David Belt of Macro Sea | Artinfo". Retrieved 2015-09-25.
  14. Mcgeehan, Patrick (2013-05-08). "Brooklyn Navy Yard Is Home to Manufacturing Cooperative". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2015-10-02.
  15. "G27 CIEE Global Institute / Macro Sea". Retrieved 2015-10-01.
  16. "Macro Sea: G27". domusweb.it. Retrieved 2015-10-01.
  17. 1 2 "The Innovator: Interview with David Belt of Macro Sea | Artinfo". Retrieved 2015-10-02.
  18. "G27 CIEE Global Institute / Macro Sea". Retrieved 2015-10-02.
  19. "DBI Projects". projects.dbinyc.com. Retrieved 2015-10-01.
  20. "About DBI Projects". projects.dbinyc.com. Retrieved 2015-10-01.
  21. Pogrebin, Robin (2015-07-23). "Ground Zero Arts Center to Shrink Further". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2015-10-01.
  22. "The "Home Team" - St Ann's Warehouse". Retrieved 2015-10-01.
  23. "About DBI Construction Consultants". cc.dbinyc.com. Retrieved 2015-10-01.
  24. "David Belt – FORA.tv Speaker – FORA.tv". library.fora.tv. Retrieved 2015-10-02.
  25. "Neighborhood Trust Financial Partners – Board of Directors". neighborhoodtrust.org. Retrieved 2015-09-25.

External links

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