About
Urbanue was founded on a simple conviction: cities are not disposable
Cities are living systems shaped by memory, infrastructure, and human aspiration.
When buildings are abandoned or neighborhoods decline, the answer is not demolition and replacement—it is regeneration.
Creating Value through Regenerative Development Solutions
We focus on creating lasting value for communities and investors alike.
The idea behind Urbanue.
Urbanue grew from decades of work in architecture, planning, and public-private development. Robert Fejeran, AIA, URP, ULI, has spent over twenty years working at the intersection of design, infrastructure, and real estate strategy—on regional transit corridors, airport master planning, industrial land redevelopment, transit-oriented development, historic preservation and adaptive reuse initiatives across the country. Throughout his career, while working on infrastructure-heavy TODs to rural mixed-use nodes, from Los Angeles to Philadelphia, he saw how disconnected planning, finance, and design decisions could weaken long-term outcomes. Projects were often technically sound, but lacked cohesion, resilience, or community alignment.
Urbanue was created to close the gap. Robert’s experience shaped a different approach. One that integrates planning, capital structuring, preservation, sustainability, and community engagement from the outset. His work has involved collaborations with municipalities, regional agencies, preservation authorities, and private partners to transform underutilized assets into mixed-use environments that serve real people. Regenerative Urbanism became the guiding framework: development not as extraction, but as restoration. Not simply building new structures, but strengthening existing fabric—economically, socially, and physically.
Today, Urbanue advances regenerative urbanism through a collaborative team of planners, designers, engineers, preservation specialists, and construction partners who operate in an integrated design-build mission.
Together, we align planning, architecture, capital strategy, and execution into one coordinated ecosystem—grounded in long-term market realities, climate resilience, and civic identity. Each project is approached not as an isolated asset, but as part of a broader urban fabric, designed to endure economically, environmentally, and culturally across generations.

