JEFFREY HELLER, FAIA PRESIDENT Jeffrey Heller, FAIA is president and founder of Heller Manus Architects. Since its beginning in 1984, the firm has established a reputation for influencing architecture and urban design in the Bay Area, nationally and internationally.

He is a leader in the profession and green movement with some of the first sustainable architecture and large scale urban planning projects in the US and China, including the first LEED Gold office towers in the sister cities of and Shanghai, the first LEED Platinum neighborhood development EDUCATION master plan, a sustainable/livable master plan for Guangzhou’s North and South Master of Science, Axes, a sustainable urban plan proposal for Shanghai’s Yangpu Waterfront, and a Architecture and Urban Design, sustainable urban plan for the city expansion area of Ulanhot, Inner Mongolia. His Massachusetts Institute of Technology work in China often now involves high speed rail land use implications.

Bachelor of Science, PROFESSIONAL TITLES Architecture and Urban Design Fellow of American Institute of Architects (FAIA) Massachusetts Institute of Technology John Bolles Fellow

PROFESSIONAL REGISTRATIONS AFFILIATIONS Registered Architect: California, Colorado, Jeffrey serves and has served on several boards and in prominent organizations: Hawaii, Idaho, Michigan, Oregon,  California Architects Board, past president Washington, Nevada, Arizona, Montana  Bay Area Council Board Member, Chair of the Transportation Committee  Asia Society Board Member AWARDS OF NOTE  San Francisco‐China Committee (ChinaSF) Advisory Board Member Armenian Earthquake Task Force, Citation  San Francisco Planning and Urban Research Association (SPUR) Advisory for Excellence in Urban Design, AIA Board National Design Awards, 1990  American Institute of Architects (AIA) ‐ Past President, San Francisco Chapter; Past Board Member, California Council 350 Bush Street  Urban Land Institute (ULI) Senior Advisor Building of the Year 2016  Council on Tall Buildings & Urban Habitat (CTBUH), task force member  San Francisco Bay Conservation & Development Commission (BCDC) 555 , 350 Bush Street, 55 Public Advisory Panel Second Street  Bay Bridge Design Advisory Panel, member San Francisco Beauty Contest Winners  Lambda Alpha International Honorary Land Use Organization, member

Emeryville Amtrak Station He is Urban Advisor to several Government entities in China. He is, PCBC Best in the West Gold Nugget Award  Advisor to the State Administration of Foreign Expert Affairs  Advisor to the Urban Research Center of MOHURD 275 Sacramento Street, Award of Merit,  Foreign expert to China Eco‐City Professional Committee Best Office Development, Gold Nugget  Advisor to China National Mayors Association Awards, 2002  Senior Urban Planning Consultant in Yangpu District of Shanghai  City Planning and Design Advisor to the city of Zhuhai San Francisco City Hall Improvement,  City Planning Advisor to the city of Chonghua Honor Award for Interior Architecture, AIA  Honorary Citizen in the city of Ulanhot National Design Awards, 2000 HONORS + AWARDS EmeryStation, Best Suburban Office Jeffrey has been recipient of several awards and honors including AIA design Development, San Francisco Business awards and various professional organizations’ awards. He is particularly proud of

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Times, 2000 receiving the National AIA Honor Award, ‘Citation for Excellence in Urban Design’, for his participation with a team of architects who performed volunteer urban Hayward City Hall, Helen Putnam Award for design work in Soviet Armenia after the 1988 Spitak earthquake. He has been Excellence, PCBC Gold Nugget Awards,2000 guest lecturer and speaker at various academic and professional venues for more

Pleasant Hill Downtown Master Plan, than 20 years. Award, APA Northern Planning, 2000 WORK EXPERIENCE RECENT SPEAKING ENGAGEMENTS Prior to forming Heller Manus Architects, Jeffrey held various roles at well‐known Global Green Cities of the 21st Century architecture firms including SOM, Gensler, and at KMD where he was partner. Symposium Asia Society Houston Building

the Cities of Asia Projects of note where Jeffrey has been Principal‐in‐Charge both at Heller Manus Urban Land Institute and prior include: Fall Meeting 2010 ‐ Washington, DC SIGNIFICANT PROJECTS IN US Urban Land Institute  Street, San Francisco, CA; 495,000 sf, 800 ft. tall, 54 stories, California High‐Speed Rail TOD MarketPlace residential/office, LEED Platinum  Oceanwide Center Towers, San Francisco, CA; 605 ft. and 950 ft. towers, 2 US‐China Green Energy Council, 3rd Annual million total square feet including commercial, residential, hotel, retail US‐China Green Energy Conference  350 Bush Street, San Francisco, CA; 440,000 SF, 19‐story, office/retail, galleria, LEED NC Platinum Stanford University  555 Mission Street, San Francisco, CA; 31‐story, 499,000 sf, First LEED‐CS Gold Smart Green Cities Conference office in San Francisco.  55 Second Street, San Francisco, CA; 25‐story, 420,000 sf office, retail, parking Council for Tall Buildings & Urban Habitat  275 Sacramento Street, San Francisco, CA; Best Office Development Gold Congress Conference ‐ Dubai Nugget Award Winner  71 Stevenson, San Francisco, CA; 23‐story, 395,000 sf commercial office building American Institute of Architects  Hayward City Hall, Hayward, CA; 4‐story, 98,000 sf public/private joint National Convention ‐ San Francisco development  EmeryStation Transit Village, Emeryville, CA; Mixed‐use transit village, Council for Tall Buildings & Urban Habitat residential, office. Congress Conference ‐ Mumbai  Emeryville Marketplace, Emeryville, CA; 1.2M gsf, First LEED‐ND Platinum, transit based, mixed‐use. Urban Land Institute New York Convention  55 Stockton Street, San Francisco, CA; 8‐story, 135,000 sf office, retail, residential American Institute of Architects, Calfornia  Montgomery Washington Tower, San Francisco, CA; 15‐story, 232,000 sf Council, Monterey Design Conference office, 87,000 sf residential  Walnut Creek Center, Walnut Creek, CA; two‐building complex with 7‐story, 185,000 sf office and 6‐story 60,000 sf office PUBLICATIONS  Galaxy Movie Theater, San Francisco, CA; four cinemas, 1,800‐seats The New York Times, “Architects Find Their Dream Client, in China”, 2011 SIGNIFICANT PROJECTS IN CHINA San Francisco BusinessTimes, “SF Archi‐  Guangzhou Urban Master Plan, Guangzhou, Guangdong, China; North tects Exercise Imagination in China”, 2010 Center Axis ‐ 6.88 sq km, waterfront development, central business district, sports center, railway station, and parks; South Center Axis ‐ 16.14 sq km, The Planning Report, “Jeffrey Heller ‐ Bay waterfront development, central government districts, transit oriented Area Architect Designing & Planning Sustainable Projects in China”, 2010 development, ferry terminal, and residential.  Eastern Harbor International Tower, Shanghai, China; 26‐story, 372,000 sf, Shanghai Daily, “Sisters Are Doing It for First LEED‐CS Gold high‐rise office.

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Themselves”, 2010  China Automotive Technology & Research Center (CATARC), Tianjin, China; 65,750 sqm, high‐tech office, hotel, and research facilities. Globe Street, “Secrets to High‐Speed Rail  Guangzhou International Fashion Center, Guangzhou, China; 48,200 sqm, in CA Unveiled”, 2010 office, retail, and fashion gallery.

Urban Land Magazine,  Guangzhou Textile Industry & Trade (TIT) Complex, Guangzhou, China; new “Repositioning Guangzhou”, 2009 650,000 sqm commercial mall and office/hotel‐apartment towers  Beijing International Culture & Arts, Beijing, China; 1.5 mil. sqm office, apartment hotel, retail, entertainment, aquarium/dolphinarium, garden  Ulan Hot, Inner Mongolia, China; master plan  Yangpu Riverfront Urban Design, Shanghai, China; master plan for sustainable waterfront district  Nansha New Area Master Plan, Guangzhou, China; 803 sq km Eco‐city, office & CBD, R&D park, port, light industrial park, residential neighborhood  Pazhou Detailed Master Plan, Guangzhou, China; 200 ha, R&D, office, stock exchange, residential, historical village renovation, parks  Zhangjiagang East District Urban Design, Suzhou, China; 6 sq km, residential, commercial‐retail, parks  Zhujiangdijing, Guangzhou, China; 350,000 sqm office, hotel, retail  Xiangyun Island International Cruise Terminal Design, International Tourist Island, Tangshan Bay, China; 26,000 sqm cruise terminal, entry plaza, rooftop garden, and wetland parks

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