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KEYNOTE
URBAN LAND INSTITUTE
02.2026
Like many, Greg has marveled at the
Urban Land Institute’s transformation from a real estate industry association into an inspiring force for change through its interdisciplinary technical assistance and advisory programs. So, he jumped at the chance to speak to ULI’s Global Governing Trustees in Washington about what ULI could become, thanks to CEO Angela Cain’s ambitious “
Futurescape 2035” campaign.
Invited to speak briefly about the trends shaping the built environment over the next decade, Greg settled on two—Big Tech’s overweening desire to divide and conquer us, and the shock(s) of climate change. Both challenges demand new forms of civic- and social infrastructure as well as the physical kind, and he hopes ULI members will have a strong role to play in that as well. He’ll revisit this theme in his closing keynote at the
ULI Florida Summit at the end of February.
What would you do if confronted with an AI doppelgänger? That’s what Greg was up against in January at
Think No More, a
threatcasting foresight workshop hosted at the
McCain Institute in Washington, D.C. At lunch, futurist and prankster
Harmon Leon drafted Greg into one of his patented
AI vs. Human Roast Battles, in which he was forced to lyrically confront an AI of himself trained on his voice and past talks. It was a vivid example of the workshop’s themes around human agency, institutions, and control in an era of agentic AI—subjects that will continue to dominate the years to come.
Watch Greg battle his AI doppelganger
Henley & Partners invited Greg to contribute to the
Henley Global Mobility Report 2026, in which he warned about the dangers posed by the combination of AI, personal data, and increasingly strict scrutiny of travelers by sovereign nations.
Citing
past foresight work for the U.S. Secret Service, he explored how a U.S. Customs and Border Protection proposal to collect social media data and personal information from foreign travelers may someday be weaponized against them. Greg was subsequently quoted by
Condé Nast Traveler on how American travelers should expect the same.
“Americans’ ease of travel is already a bargaining chip in the Trump administration’s brass-knuckle negotiations with foreign governments,” says Greg Lindsay, senior fellow at MIT’s Future Urban Collectives Lab and an expert on globalization and transportation policy. “It’s reasonable to expect Americans to be caught in a geopolitical tug-of-war for the foreseeable future.”
Read his essay for Henley & Partners
Read his quote in Condé Nast Traveler
Nearly a decade ago, Greg was the founding director of strategy at
CoMotion—a first-of-its-kind conference and festival celebrating the future of urban mobility. He returned in December to co-host and keynote the inaugural global edition in Riyadh, which convened more than 100 mayors from across the Global South to share policies and forge partnerships.
In addition to co-hosting the main stage, Greg delivered a keynote on “
The Augmented City” and moderated a discussion on AI and “sentient cities” with Venice Architecture Biennale curator Carlo Ratti and former president of Costa Rica Carlos Alvarado Quesada.
Watch Greg’s keynote
Watch Greg’s panel on “sentient cities”
For a second consecutive year, Greg was invited to contribute to
Emerging Trends in Real Estate—the annual flagship publication by PwC and the Urban Land Institute—this time under the heading of “From Proptech to PropOS: The Emergence of Real Estate’s Autonomous Future.”
Combining contemporaneous examples with speculative uses of AI “agents” and “digital twins,” he describes how artificial intelligence promises to glue together disparate systems. Will the coming year prove him right, or wrong?
Read the essay
Download the report
“The Screen Killed the City” was the title of Greg’s talk at
WRLDCTY in Vancouver. Weaving together the
loneliness epidemic, screen addiction, quick commerce, “AI”
slop, and his report
The Augmented City, he argued the physical world is becoming vestigial to the digital one. The task for urbanists, he argued, is to create new public and private spaces where being together with other people is more attractive than being alone with our phones.
He expanded on this thesis on the
Challengers Cities podcast with Iain Montgomery: “Greg doesn’t warm up to get going, he sorta just detonates, in both our podcast chat, as well as his keynote.”
“
We’ve built an environment,” said Greg, “
where people are spending more of their real lives in interior spaces with the digital world.”
Watch the keynote
Listen to the podcast
Speaking at Zonda’s “Future Place” conference in Dallas-Fort Worth, Greg explored how America’s master-planned communities became test beds in building a new generation of spaces and places instead of screens.
Communities such as
Firefly—“a new Active Family Community
® designed to get kids to unplug from the digital world”—and
Storyliving by Disney—“infused with the imagination of Walt Disney Imagineers and managed by Disney Cast with the simple notion of bringing people together”—underscore the hunger for these concepts.
In Texas, Greg also met with
Radical Play Concepts Partners’ Dawson Williams and Nick Clark to discuss their plans for repurposing a vacant medical office building as the first in a new generation of country clubs aimed at millennial families. Despite the economic and technological forces keeping people apart, they’re both hungry to be together.
Read the recap
Greg and his “
Unfrozen” podcast co-host
Daniel Safarik started a new season featuring the bone-chilling plans for the post-war reconstruction of Gaza (!), a detective novel about OMA’s Rem Koolhaas (!!), and North America’s post-climate change future, to name a few.
Listen to episodes:
No. 104 – Make Gaza GREAT Again
No. 105 – The House of Dr. Koolhaas
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