Todd W. Clayter

Mr. Clayter is an independent business consultant, specializing in real estate development, particularly urban infill, mixed commercial/residential projects. He has been a consultant to UrbanCore LLC, a real estate development firm in San Francisco for the past 5 years. Prior to that, Mr. Clayter was Development Manager for The Jefferson Company (later Primus Infrastructure, LLC), responsible for the preparation, adoption and implementation of the Fillmore Jazz Preservation District in San Francisco's historic Fillmore District. Over a ten-year period, his work included advising UrbanCore (formerly Em Johnson Interest) on the retail development program for the Fillmore Heritage Center (which includes 40,000 sf of retail and 80 condos) as well as programming theme-related stores in the blocks adjacent to this catalyst project.

In the role of co-development manager for the rehabilitation of the Ferry Building in San Francisco, Mr. Clayter was responsible for entitlements, including multi-jurisdictional regulatory approvals, development agreement and lease negotiations, public policy compliance and reporting for the $100 million restoration of this national historic landmark. In conjunction with Wilson-Equity Office, he participated in all aspects of design development, retail programming and long-term tenant buyout negotiations. The Project was initiated December 1998 and completed April 2004.

Mr. Clayter was a Project Manager for the development of AT&T Park (formerly Pacific Bell Park) in San Francisco, CA. As a member of the construction management team for the $350 million stadium project built for the San Francisco Giants, he implemented and oversaw a small business utilization and local employment program that yielded $42 million in local consulting and contracting, and a job training and placement program that yielded 200 new construction workers.

Mr. Clayter holds a Master's in Regional Science (Urban Economics and Public Policy) from Cornell University, and a Bachelor's in Political Science (Urban Studies) from UCLA. He also was an Urban Land Institute Fellow while studying law at Hastings College of the Law in San Francisco. He currently serves as a member of the Board of Directors of Episcopal Community Services, a homeless housing and support services non-profit in San Francisco. He is also a member of the Urban Land Institute and SPUR (San Francisco Planning and Urban Research). Most recently he was appointed to the A