California-Nevada Technical Assistance Leadership Exchange
The ULI California-Nevada Technical Assistance Leadership Exchange advances innovative solutions to regional land use and climate resilience issues through collaboration between local governments, public sector leaders, and the real estate industry. The program facilitates connections, dialogue, and expert exchange to explore strategies for creating resilient and sustainable communities through land use and real estate interventions.
Seven public agencies in California and Nevada were selected to participate in this program. Working in tandem with their closest ULI District Council, each of these agencies will host a Technical Assistance Panel focused on a specific resilience and land use challenge in their communities. Technical Assistance Panels, modeled after ULI’s Advisory Services, are multiday engagements that leverage the expertise of the ULI member network to provide technical advice to cities around specific land use challenges. The participating agencies include:
- City of Long Beach
- Nevada State University
- City of Needles
- City of Sacramento
- Sacramento County
- City of San Diego
- City of San José
This program is made possible through a generous donation from the ULI Governor and Trustee, Randall Lewis.
City of Long Beach (ULI Los Angeles) | December 10 – 11, 2025
In partnership with the City of Long Beach, ULI LA will offer strategies for implementing the city’s proposed vision for the downtown waterfront area with a focus on resilience. The panel will offer ideas around the area’s ecological infrastructure, including a new outdoor wetland, as well as the city’s leasehold strategy to promote activation, multimodal connectivity, and other considerations.
Nevada State University (ULI Nevada) | April 2026
ULI Nevada will offer recommendations to Nevada State University around the development plan for a 400-acre parcel adjacent to the school’s growing campus. With a once-in-a-generation opportunity to shape a university district from the ground up, the panel will provide strategic advice around phasing development, attracting private-sector partners, and aligning land use with water and climate resilience goals in the Southern Nevada context, with a goal to create a walkable, mixed-use district that fosters learning, health, innovation, and community pride.
City of Needles (ULI Orange County/Inland Empire) | October 6 – 7, 2025
ULI Orange County/Inland Empire is partnering with the City of Needles to identify strategic opportunities for sustainable growth and resilience. The project will focus on how Needles can grow by attracting businesses and housing, thrive by addressing community needs, and mitigate extreme heat, infrastructure challenges, and safety concerns. The team will deliver actionable recommendations to support the city’s long-term prosperity.
City of Sacramento & Sacramento County (ULI Sacramento) | September 15 – 17, 2025
ULI Sacramento is collaborating with the City of Sacramento Planning Division and Sacramento County Planning and Environmental Review to explore strategies for mitigating the urban heat island (UHI) related to new development. Sacramento faces extreme heat, flooding, and air quality impacts projected to increase over the next century, and this partnership will work to identify policies and strategies to ensure a more cohesive, equitable, and impactful approach to addressing UHI across the region.
City of San Diego (ULI San Diego-Tijuana) | September 8 – 9, 2025 | TAP REPORT
In partnership with the City of San Diego, ULI San Diego-Tijuana will offer recommendations around catalyzing the development of “missing middle” housing types that integrate heat resilient design elements and sustainable building materials. The city aims to incorporate heat resilient design features into preapproved plans for duplexes, triplexes, bungalow courts, and other small-scale multiple home developments, making it easier and more financially feasible for developers to build these types of homes, and mitigating the urban heat island effect in vulnerable neighborhoods.
City of San José (ULI San Francisco) | March 18 – 19, 2026
The City of San José is leveraging the ULI TAP to identify best practices and funding strategies for implementing its forthcoming Climate Adaptation and Resilience Plan (CARP). The CARP project focuses on addressing site-specific vulnerabilities to flooding and extreme heat, strengthening equitable community engagement, and supporting long-term climate resilience for the city’s most at-risk populations.
Sacramento TAP Panelists
Technical Assistance Panels (TAPs)
As part of this project, selected governments will work with their local ULI District Council to execute one TAP focused on a specific local land use and resilience issue. TAPs leverage the knowledge and expertise of the ULI membership to provide objective advice to city agencies and nonprofits on specific land use challenges. ULI has been providing technical assistance to communities for more than 75 years. During a TAP, a small group of volunteers work over a concentrated timeline to provide solutions to complex land use and real estate problems posed by a local government or nonprofit. ULI selects volunteers or “panelists” from its global network of more than 48,000 members based on the specific nature of each assignment. Panel member expertise typically includes real estate developers, investors, designers, planners, engineers, market and financial analysts, and public sector members. The panel lasts two to three days, and on the final day, the panel presents its final recommendations to the local government and key stakeholders. Following the final presentation, ULI prepares a formal report summarizing the recommendations, completed a few months after the on-site engagement.
Goals
Program Goals
- Support local governments in identifying practical solutions to land use challenges focused on climate risk and resilience.
- Foster stronger connections among California- and Nevada-based governments and land use professionals, demonstrating how cross-sector and cross-regional partnerships can advance innovative ideas and community success.
- Distill key lessons, policy approaches, and strategies that other communities can adopt locally and nationally.
Benefits
- Technical Assistance: Objective recommendations and advice on a local land use challenge through a ULI TAP (a $20k – $35k value). See the Technical Assistance Panel section above.
- Cross-sector Knowledge and Leadership Exchange & Networking: Participation in a year-long exchange program with ULI members and other land use professionals from municipalities in California and Nevada. To support learning and sharing, participating governments will be expected to attend virtual and in-person events throughout the program. In addition, program participants will have the opportunity to support TAPs in other communities. Travel, accommodations, and dining stipend provided by ULI.
- ULI Memberships: Participating governments will receive a free Public Agency Membership package for one year ($680 value). The membership package includes one full membership and two associate memberships. ULI memberships must be assigned to individuals on staff at the public agency, and the expectation is that the individuals receiving the memberships will attend the ULI Spring and Fall Meetings and participate in the exchange elements of the program. Additional memberships can be added starting at $150 per individual per year (see details here).
- ULI Fall and Spring Meeting Attendance: Participating governments will receive registration and travel support (stipend) for two (2) individuals to attend the ULI Spring Meeting in Denver, CO (May 12 – 14, 2025) and the ULI Fall Meeting in San Francisco (November 4 – 6). ULI will host an in-person convening at each conference for members of the exchange to meet, network, and discuss their projects. Attendance at these in-person convenings is required for all participating governments. ($3,500++ value.)
- ULI Resilience Summit Attendance: As an added benefit, program participants who attend the ULI Spring Meeting in Denver have the option to attend the ULI Resilience Summit on Thursday, May 15. The Resilience Summit is ULI’s flagship climate adaptation event, convening industry leaders in real estate and resilience from around the world to address the challenges and harness the opportunities posed by climate risks.
Timeline
- April 2025: Program launch
- May 12 – 15, 2025: In-person convening at the ULI Spring Meeting; Denver
- July 2025: Virtual convening
- September 2025: Virtual convening
- November 4 – 6, 2025: In-person convening at the ULI Fall Meeting; San Francisco
- January 2026: Virtual convening
- March 2026: Virtual convening
- May 2026: Program close-out
- May/June 2026: ULI publishes a summary report distilling key lessons learned and best practices from program projects.
Media & Additional Resources
Questions & More Information
Please contact Victoria Oestreich, Director, Advisory Services at [email protected].