From Public Housing to Investing
Born in Brooklyn in 1957, Radow was raised in and around public housing projects and saw how poverty and segregation affected public policy. He decided that if he were ever able to do so, he would help families just like those with whom he grew up to live in safer communities that offered more opportunities.
After graduating SUNY, Radow attended New York Law School and graduated in 1981. He made his first real estate deal in 1980, buying and selling a small building in Manhattan with a $10,000 loan from his family. The profits from this deal financed his last year of law school and set the trajectory for his entire career.
Radow began working at the intersection of law, real estate, and government for New York City’s Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) where he litigated cases relating to tax-foreclosed housing mostly in Brooklyn. In 1987, he won a precedent-setting case in New York’s First Appellate Department that invalidated the New York City tax foreclosure statute as unconstitutional. Soon after, Radow moved his family to Georgia, where he served as general counsel for an international real estate firm headquartered in Atlanta. He worked on transactions, litigated challenging cases, and handled the firm’s restructuring during the savings and loans crises that nearly destroyed the real estate industry in the early 1990s.