Logue left Boston to head the new
New York State Urban Development Corporation (UDC) from 1968 to 1975 that was created by New York Governor
Nelson Rockefeller. During his tenure, the organization undertook projects at a quick pace. The organization largely forwent the processes of
underwriting and
due diligence that private projects typically had to undergo in order to ensure that revenue can be generated sufficient for long-term financing and operations. The agency anticipated that it would be able to rely upon continued federal government funding that would allow for it to sustain its finances. In 1975, the UDC defaulted on its debts (going
bankrupt) in 1975 as consequence of factors that included a
Nixon administration restructuring of housing programs, rising
interest rates, and declining confidence of investors in the ability of the agency to pay back bonds. Logue resigned from the UDC after it went bankrupt. His reputation was greatly damaged as a result of the agency's bankruptcy. As head of the agency, Logue oversaw the construction of various housing projects, notably on
Roosevelt Island. 33,000 units were constructed under Logue. He also supported a failed plan to construct 900 low-income housing units in
Westchester County, New York. In the late 1960s, he led a project to design a neighborhood in
Fort Lincoln, Washington, D.C., for 25,000 people as requested by then-President
Lyndon B. Johnson. However, nothing came of the planning. ==President of the South Bronx Development Organization (1979–1985)==