Tishman Speyer
Tishman Speyer is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at Tishman Speyer.
Tishman Speyer is a company.
Key people at Tishman Speyer.
Key people at Tishman Speyer.
Tishman Speyer is a leading global real estate owner, operator, developer, and investment manager founded in 1978, headquartered at 45 Rockefeller Plaza in New York City.[1][2][3][4] The firm manages over 215 assets worldwide, serving 1,600 customers including universities, governments, sports teams, and corporations, with a portfolio spanning office, retail, residential, and mixed-use properties valued at nearly $89 billion historically.[1][2][4][6] Its mission centers on unlocking human potential through community-focused real estate that integrates technology, ESG principles, and hospitality-driven experiences, converting opportunities into lasting value across markets from Boston to Beijing.[2][4][5]
While not a traditional tech or startup investor, Tishman Speyer influences innovation ecosystems by developing "futureproof" spaces like labs, boardrooms, and experiential environments that foster collaboration and ideas, such as the Enterprise Research Campus in Boston and The Spiral in Hudson Yards.[2][3][4]
Tishman Speyer was founded in 1978 by Robert Tishman and Jerry Speyer in New York, building on their families' real estate legacies to create a powerhouse in property investment and development.[3] Early milestones included high-profile acquisitions like J.C. Penney's headquarters in 1988 and Europe's tallest tower, Messeturm in Frankfurt, that same year, marking its international expansion.[3] The firm evolved from U.S.-centric deals—such as selling 666 Fifth Avenue for $1.8 billion in 2006 and developing Yankee Stadium in 2007—to a global platform with ventures in Chicago, Shanghai, San Francisco, and beyond, including a $1.8 billion office portfolio purchase from Blackstone in 2007.[1][3]
Over 45+ years, it has grown into a vertically integrated operation with 1,001-5,000 employees, emphasizing innovation amid market shifts like post-2008 recovery and ESG integration.[2][6]
Tishman Speyer rides the trend of real estate-tech convergence, creating "innovation needs a where™" by developing hybrid spaces blending physical assets with digital integration for labs, campuses, and collaborative hubs amid remote/hybrid work shifts and urban revitalization.[2][4] Timing aligns with post-pandemic demand for experiential, sustainable properties—evident in projects like The Spiral and Mission Rock—that support tech ecosystems, universities, and research (e.g., Enterprise Research Campus).[3][4] Market forces like ESG mandates, urbanization in Asia (Shanghai JV, Seoul office), and institutional capital (GIC partnerships) favor its model, while it influences the ecosystem by standardizing social impact metrics and activating neighborhoods with public spaces and affordability.[7]
Tishman Speyer is poised to expand in high-growth regions like APAC and multifamily, with recent hires signaling deeper penetration in Japan, Australia, and South Korea, alongside funds targeting $500M+ vehicles.[7] Trends like AI-driven proptech, climate-resilient designs, and community-centric developments will shape its path, amplifying its role in "timeless communities" that unlock potential. Its influence may evolve toward more tech-infused, impact-focused investments, solidifying its status as a real estate innovator bridging people, technology, and place—from global icons like Rockefeller Center to tomorrow's urban labs.[2][3][4]
| Date | Company | Round | Lead Investor(s) | Co-Investor(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Feb 4, 2026 | Bedrock Robotics | $270.0M Series B | CapitalG, Valor Equity Partners | 8VC, C4 Ventures, Eclipse Ventures, Emergence Capital, Georgian, Incharge Capital Partners, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, NVentures, Perry Creek Capital, Xora Innovation |