Jane Goldman (real estate investor)

Jane Goldman (born 1955) is an American billionaire, and the co-chair and co-owner (alongside her three siblings) of the real estate investment company Solil Management. As of July 2020, she has a net worth of $3 billion.

Jane Goldman
Born1955 (age 6465)
NationalityAmerican
EducationManhattanville College
Net worth$3.0 billion (July 2020)[1]
Spouse(s)Benjamin H. Lewis
Parent(s)Sol Goldman (1917–1987)
Lillian Schuman Goldman (1922–2002)
FamilyAllan H. Goldman (brother)
Diane Goldman Kemper (sister)
Amy Goldman Fowler (sister)
Lloyd Goldman (cousin)

Biography

Goldman was born in 1955[2] to a Jewish family, the daughter of Lillian (née Schuman) and Sol Goldman.[3][4] She is the youngest of three siblings: Allan H. Goldman, Diane Goldman Kemper, and Amy Goldman Fowler.[5] Her father was the largest non-institutional real estate investor in New York City in the 1980s, owning a portfolio of nearly 1,900 commercial and residential properties.[5] She attended the Masters School, the American School in Switzerland, and graduated from Manhattanville College.[6]

After her father's death, she and her two sisters engaged in litigation with their mother over his assets; their mother subsequently received 1/3rd of their father's estate.[7] She and her brother, Allan Goldman, manage the remaining real estate assets via the firm Solil Management.[8] Her cousin, Lloyd Goldman, is also a notable real-estate investor in New York City.[9]

In 1979, she married Dr. Benjamin H. Lewis in a Jewish ceremony at the family home in New York City.[6]

Career

As principal of Solil Management, Jane carries of portfolio of over 400 properties that include high-end apartments on the Upper East Side, a block of land in Midtown Manhattan that includes the Olympic Tower and the Cartier Mansion, and the Peninsula Hotel, and a 17% stake in the World Trade Center developments in lower Manhattan.[10][1]

In June 2020, Jane sold her Kennedy Palm Beach compound for approximately $70 million, which was purchased for $31 million in 2015.[11][12]

gollark: Approval voting: you can check multiple options on the ballot. The candidate/thing/whatever with the most votes wins.
gollark: No.
gollark: Than first past the post.
gollark: Approval voting and score voting are... less bad?
gollark: <@519457828126326799> The problem with a three party system is that basically all countries use awful voting systems.

References

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