Not only for the money
Stacey Greene’s reputation in the venture capital world was built on an uncanny sense of the unseen. While other partners at Sterling & Gordon scrutinized spreadsheets for hockey-stick growth, Stacey saw something else: architecture. Not of market dominance, but of physical space. She could walk into a fledgling startup’s cramped office and not just see a risky investment but feel the potential in the dingy drywall. It was a secret she attributed to her first love: the visceral smell of fresh paint, the transformative power of a perfectly balanced color palette, the quiet narrative of a well-designed room. Her Saturdays were sacred, spent not at pitch meetings, but in coveralls, helping strangers with brushes and vision. She never advertised it; people just found her. A friend of a friend. A community board post. A struggling shop owner met in line for coffee. That’s how she met Coriss. His cafe, The Daily Grind, was a box of beige despair on a vibrant block. The coffee was ex...