In addition to a career filled with purpose and opportunity, U-M offers a comprehensive benefits package to help you stay well, protect yourself and your family, and plan for a secure future. Benefits include a retirement plan with two-for-one matching contributions after the first year; many choices for comprehensive health insurance; life insurance; long-term disability coverage; and flexible spending accounts for healthcare and dependent care expenses. Learn more about U-M benefits. The university is responsive to the needs of dual career couples.
About Taubman College and the Urban and Regional Planning Program
Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning is one of the leading schools of architecture and planning in the United States, offering degree programs in architecture, urban and regional planning, urban design, and urban technology. The college is housed in a recently expanded studio, classroom, and research complex on the University of Michigan's North Campus, alongside design fabrication labs, visualization facilities, and dedicated space for student-led research and collaboration.
The Urban and Regional Planning Program offers a Master of Urban and Regional Planning (MURP), a Ph.D. in Urban and Regional Planning, a Bachelor of Science in Urban Technology, an undergraduate minor in real estate, and a graduate certificate in real estate development. The MURP is consistently ranked among the top planning programs in the country, and the BS in Urban Technology is the first program of its kind in the United States, preparing students to design and govern the data-rich cities of the future. New faculty join a community of approximately 40 planning faculty and 500 students-200 studying real estate-with access to the resources of one of the world's preeminent research universities.
Our location offers a rare advantage: faculty and students work at the doorstep of metropolitan Detroit, one of the most distinctive real estate and planning landscapes in North America, and within easy reach of Chicago, Toronto, and other major markets in the Great Lakes region. The setting supports applied research, partnerships with public agencies and developers, and project-based learning that few peer programs can match.
About Real Estate at Michigan
Real estate at the University of Michigan brings together faculty, students, and industry leaders across Taubman College, the Stephen M. Ross School of Business, the Law School, and the College of Engineering, creating one of the most distinctive real estate communities in higher education. The undergraduate minor in real estate offers students from across the university a structured path into the field. The graduate certificate in real estate development draws students from planning, business, law, architecture, and engineering into a multidisciplinary credential anchored in development practice.
Both programs feature site visits, treks, case competitions, case studies, and capstone projects with leading developers, public agencies, and community-based organizations across Michigan and beyond. Students engage with practitioners through the Michigan Real Estate Forum, the annual Weiser Real Estate Conference, and a growing network of alumni working in development, investment, public finance, and community real estate.
About the Weiser Center for Real Estate
The Weiser Center for Real Estate is the University of Michigan's hub for real estate research, teaching, and industry engagement. The Center convenes faculty across schools, supports student fellowships and applied research, and hosts conferences, lectures, and practitioner-in-residence programs that connect Michigan to leaders in development, finance, public policy, and community practice. Faculty affiliated with the Weiser Center benefit from dedicated programming support, graduate student funding, and a broad network of alumni and industry partners.