Murray Kushner | |
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Born | 1951 (age 65–66) |
Nationality | United States |
Alma mater | University of Pennsylvania |
Known for | Founder of The KRE Group |
Spouse(s) | Lee |
Children | Marc Kushner |
Parent(s) | Joseph Kushner |
Family |
Charles Kushner (brother) Jared Kushner (nephew) Joshua Kushner (nephew) |
Murray Kushner (born 1951) is an American real estate developer.
Kushner's parents Joseph Kushner and Rae Kushner, Holocaust survivors, came to America from Poland by way of Italy in 1949. His father worked as a construction worker and concurrently as an independent builder, while investing in real estate, eventually building a portfolio totaling 4,000 New Jersey apartments. The Joseph Kushner Hebrew Academy and the Rae Kushner Yeshiva High School, in Livingston, New Jersey, built by Charles Kushner, are named after them. He has two sisters, Esther and Linda, and a younger brother, Charles. Murray graduated summa cum laude with a B.A. from the University of Pennsylvania and then went on to obtain a J.D. from the University of Pennsylvania Law School. After school, he worked for the family real estate business and after his father's death, he and his siblings equally divided ownership of the company. His relationship with his brother eventually deteriorated over investment decisions especially Murray's veto on the purchase of Berkshire Realty, a firm that owned 24,000 apartments, which would have made Kushner Properties the largest privately held real-estate firm in the region. In 2000, the brothers decided to no longer work together as business partners. His firm The KRE Group, has since grown to more than 100 full-time employees with a portfolio of 9,000 apartments and 6 million square feet of office and industrial property.
KRE has developed projects throughout the Northeast Corridor, with several located in Downtown Jersey City. In July, 2014, the company began construction on the first phase of Journal Squared, a residential development adjacent to the Journal Square Transportation Center. The project will be constructed in three phases and is approved for a total of 1,838 units, including a 70-story building, which will be the tallest building in Jersey City when completed.