Ben Abelman

AICP, LEED GA
Senior Associate, Director of Zoning & Predevelopment

Design matters but what also matters is the way one speaks about, and presents, design.

Architecture has taken on more of a starring role in the public realm. As people seek out greater design, that helps shape architecture for the better.
An urban designer with a focus on pre-design services, Ben translates zoning code—the DNA of a building—into building form. With over ten years professional experience in both the public and private sectors, Ben combines a thorough knowledge of New York City's regulatory framework with a sensitivity toward design.

Ben has always had a passion for creating cities, drawing countless maps of the places he and his parents visited on road trips. But while he knew that maps can capture the world on a page, he wanted to engage with it at a larger scale and so turned to architecture. Ever since he achieved degrees in architecture from Rhode Island School of Design and Columbia University, he has been shaping building narratives using the very rules and regulations from which design emerges.

Ben contributes regularly to pre-design zoning analysis and master planning on many of our NYC projects, from analyzing infill development opportunities within public housing super blocks as an urban designer with the New York City Housing Authority to participating on a team in MoMA's 2010 Rising Currents exhibition. His broad perspective from his work within the private and public sectors is invaluable to both his practice and to his teaching at Columbia University's Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, where he is an assistant adjunct professor of urban design.
Education
M.S. Architecture and Urban Design, Columbia University
B.F.A., Rhode Island School of Design
B.Arch., Rhode Island School of Design
Professional registration

LEED Green Associate Accredited by the US Green Building Council

Memberships/affiliations

American Institute of Certified Planners (AICP)

Honors

The Lowenfish Memorial Prize, Urban Design Program, Columbia University
National Ideas Competition: 3rd Prize, "A NEW INFRASTRUCTURE: Innovative Transit Solutions for Los Angeles," SCI-Arc, The Architect's Newspaper & Archinect, Los Angeles, CA
William Kinne Traveling Fellowship