Alex Satloff, Senior Analyst | Planner

Alexander Satloff, Analyst, joined BJH Advisors during the tail end of his master’s program. At BJH, Alexander has worked with a diverse range of clients from around the United States, executing market potential, demand outlook, environmental impact, socioeconomic impact, and cost-benefit analyses.

During his time at the New York City Department of Transportation, Alexander was fundamental in the formulation of the City’s Carshare Permanent Program. His duties involved reviewing all sites submitted by carshare companies, defining compliance and equity criteria for the program, and representing DOT at community board hearings.

Apart from Carshare, he has worked on many high-profile projects, including Reimagining the Cross Bronx Expressway, Open Streets and Open Restaurants, Citi Bike and Bike Share expansion, and taxi signage updates. As part of these projects Alexander formulated research design, GIS-powered quantitative analyses, grant applications, social media outreach campaigns, official DOT webmaps, and many other public-facing deliverables, as well as acting as a liaison in interacting with diverse stakeholders at the neighborhood, county, state, and federal levels.

As a graduate student of The New School, Alexander majored in Public and Urban Policy and minored in Global Urban Futures. Engaging with, and consulting major policymakers and stakeholders through real-world client work made up the majority of his coursework, with his clients including the New York Public Library and New Destiny Housing. His capstone involved partnering with the NYC Department of Design and Construction and NYU Tandon on a policy project to evaluate the political feasibility of infrastructure vulnerability solutions.

Alexander has extensive experience with GIS applications such as ArcGIS, QGIS, StreetLight InSight, etc, as well as the Microsoft Suite, R, Google Analytics, and CRM software. He is proficient in Mandarin Chinese.

  • Master of Science, The New School

    Bachelor of Arts, New York University