3333 BLEECKER ST, DALLAS, TX, 75019
$53,000,000
2025 Appraised Value
↑ 0.0% from prior year
📍 This parcel is part of the WHARF AT THE SOUND community — scraped data shown is for the full community.
The property's flat $53.0M appraisal and deteriorating Google rating trajectory (3.4→2.6 stars in six months) signal operational distress that overshadows its otherwise stable financial structure. Bleecker Street is a 242-unit, 2017-built Class B asset with $39.5M FHA debt at 2.71% (83.0% LTV, 2056 maturity), positioned in a rental-dependent urban core ($113.7K median 1-mile income, 93.9% renters) that increasingly competes against wealthier suburban ownership tiers in the 3-mile ring. The recent review collapse—driven by persistent elevator outages (40+ days unresolved), mail failures, and management non-response—suggests either acute transition dysfunction or deferred capex hitting the physical plant; this contradicts the "stabilized hold" debt profile and implies material near-term capex exposure. The submarket compounds risk: zero pipeline penetration masks underlying demand softening (rising vacancy trends), while a Walk Score of 20 and no transit access structurally limit appeal to non-car-dependent renters, constraining pricing power. The unit portfolio is heterogeneous—51 of 179 sampled units retain builder-grade finishes post-renovation window, signaling incomplete upgrade cycles.
Directional Read: PASS or conditional WATCH. The combination of operational red flags (systematic service failures, rating deterioration), physical plant questions (infrastructure breakdowns), and structural location constraints (car-dependency, no transit) outweigh the debt stability and absence of supply pressure. If ownership transition or management turnover explains the recent decline and capex needs are quantifiable and addressable within a 12-month window, this becomes a turnaround watch-list candidate; otherwise, the execution risk on operational stabilization and the locational headwind for premium rent support make this a below-threshold acquisition target for a stabilized-asset PE strategy.
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Interior Finishes & Renovation Status
Bleecker Street's 242 units reflect a heterogeneous portfolio across the 2016–2020 renovation window, with 51 of 179 analyzed photos dating to that era. Unit finishes cluster at "upgraded" (86 observations) rather than premium, driven by mid-range stainless appliances (25 units), quartz countertops (21 units), and modern slab cabinetry (26 units)—standard Class B product. However, 35 observations of builder-grade finishes and subway tile backsplashes (18 units) alongside laminate counters (1 unit) signal incomplete/staggered unit renovation; some units retain original 2017 finishes while others received 2018–2020 updates. Paint condition skews fresh (94 observations), mitigating dated cosmetics.
Exterior & Amenities
The property presents mixed curb appeal: waterfront location and contemporary mid-rise mid-rise architecture are offset by three distinct building styles (garden, podium, high-rise) suggesting either phased development or acquisition of multiple parcels. Amenities justify Class B positioning—a resort-style pool, modern fitness center with industrial detailing, and recently renovated clubhouse (2020s-era exposed brick, polished concrete, waterfall bar) indicate property-level investment.
Class B with Selective Value-Add
Overall condition rates "excellent" (93 observations) to "good" (55), positioning this as solid Class B. The 35 units with builder-grade/original finishes represent near-term unit upside if capital deployment targets kitchen/bath standardization.
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This photo was not identified as property-related.
No AI analysis available for this photo.
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Location Profile Severely Constrains Tenant Appeal & Valuation
A Walk Score of 20 and zero transit access position Bleecker Street Apartments in a car-dependent periphery with no multimodal commute options—a structural disadvantage for urban multifamily commanding premium rents. The Bike Score of 28 offers minimal mitigation; this is effectively a drive-to-everything location without the walkable amenities (restaurants, retail, fitness clusters) that typically justify above-market pricing in Dallas. Without rent data, we cannot assess whether pricing reflects this mobility liability, but the absence of transit particularly constrains appeal to younger professionals and transit-dependent renters—likely limiting upside to workforce/value-add segments reliant on car ownership.
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Zero supply pressure masks underlying market weakness. With 0.0% pipeline penetration and no competing projects in the immediate vicinity, this 242-unit asset faces no near-term occupancy headwinds from new construction. However, the deteriorating submarket vacancy trend suggests demand-side softening is already underway—supply relief from pipeline scarcity won't offset existing lease-up challenges. Landlords here will compete on concessions and pricing rather than benefit from supply constraints.
No multifamily construction permits found within 3 miles
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Estimated from loan records, rental listings, and appraisal data using industry-standard assumptions.
Based on most recent loan: $39,543,000 (Jul 2021, hud_fha) @ 2.71%
Computed from nearby properties within 3 miles of similar vintage
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Bleecker Street Apartments is a 242-unit, four-story mid-rise built in 2017 with brick exterior and wood-frame construction, totaling 306.9K sf (219.5K sf NLA). The property is rated GOOD on both quality and condition metrics, though its walk score of 20 indicates car-dependent positioning in Dallas. No parking type, utilities, pet policy, or amenity data are available in this record.
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Affordability and Rent Support
The 1-mile radius median household income of $113.7K and 18.3% affordability ratio suggest rents are positioned for upper-middle-income renters rather than workforce housing. Without stated rent, the metric implies monthly rents near $1,730–$1,900, aligned with the income profile but compressed against the 93.9% renter concentration, which signals limited ownership alternative and potential rent-inelastic demand.
Demographic Mismatch: Urban Core vs. Suburban Ring
The 1-mile submarket is distinctly different—denser ($113.7K median income, 93.9% renters, 1.83 household size) versus the 3-mile ring ($131.0K income, 53.4% renters, 2.62 household size). This urban-to-suburban income and renter-share gradient suggests the property anchors a rental-dependent urban core, but incoming 3-mile residents are wealthier owner-occupiers. The 5-mile median income drops to $117.0K—indicating the property sits at the margin of a mixed-tenure, middle-to-affluent market rather than a pure renter stronghold.
Income Distribution Skew
54% of 1-mile residents earn over $100K versus 61.2% in the 3-mile radius, pointing to affluent-renter positioning. However, 16.7% of the core 1-mile population earns under $50K, adding some workforce depth—enough to suggest blend risk if market tightens.
Source: US Census ACS 5-Year Estimates (2023) · 1 tracts (1mi)
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The property has remained flat at $53.0M in appraised value year-over-year, translating to $219.0K per unit—a metric worth benchmarking against comparable Class A multifamily in the market. The improvement-to-land split (97.8% / 2.2%) reflects a 2017-built asset with minimal land value uplift, limiting redevelopment optionality; any future value creation depends almost entirely on operational performance rather than land appreciation or tear-down scenarios. With only one appraisal in the dataset, the stasis cannot be contextualized against prior growth trajectory or market cycles, leaving questions about whether flat performance masks prior appreciation or signals softening demand in this asset class or submarket.
| Year | Total Value | Change |
|---|---|---|
| 2025 | $53,000,000 | +0.0% |
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Rating collapse signals acute operational deterioration. The 6-month average plummeted from 3.4 to 2.6 stars—a 23.5% decline—despite the overall 4.6 rating being inflated by 810 five-star reviews (83.1% of all reviews). The recent sample reveals a bifurcated experience: elevated individual staff performance (Mariah, Tanner, Daniel) masks systemic failures in building infrastructure and management response. Recurring complaints center on elevator outages (40+ days unresolved in Wharf Building), mail/package handling failures, and slow service recovery—each a capex/opex red flag indicating either deferred maintenance or management capacity constraints. The trajectory strongly undermines the investment thesis, suggesting either recent ownership/operational changes creating transition dysfunction or deteriorating physical plant that will compound carrying costs if not immediately addressed.
957 reviews total
DO NOT MOVE HERE WHATEVER YOU DO! The problems with the elevators are constant and ongoing and the office is extremely slow to respond. We had an elevators outage for 45 days and the residents were not compensated for the inconvenience in any way shape or form. This is an over priced not at all luxury apartment that has constant issues with the garages, packages being stolen, air conditioners breaking constantly. With so many options to live I would never choose this place. I’ve been a 5 year resident and paid almost $200,000 to this apartment in rent. The day I am moving out of my 5th floor apartment the elevator is conveniently closed down by the fire marshal as the call button to call the fire department wasn’t working. Nothing was actually wrong with the elevator but it made my move cost three times as much as the elevator was broken. If you want to pay way too much money to a very incompetent office staff move here. Otherwise RUN VERY FAR AWAY and don’t let them steal your money and peace of mind
I am posting this review to reflect the EXCELLENT service I received from Mariah, which far exceeded my expectations. She not only answered all of my questions and addressed every concern, but she truly went above and beyond to make sure I felt at home at The Flats.
My move-in process was definitely turbulent, but Mariah handled everything with patience, care, and professionalism. She made sure my dogs were safe and comfortable, and most importantly, she made me feel at home. Her dedication and kindness did not go unnoticed, and I am incredibly grateful for her support throughout the entire process.
Owner response
Hi, Ashlyn. Your feedback is highly appreciated. Thank you for the review!
Terrible experience. Their online verification system failed even though we had all required documents. Front desk and manager were not helpful and refused to do in-person verification.Phone call were hardly answered. Poor service and zero flexibility. Do not rely on this apartment.
Owner response
Hi Sharif, thank you for your patience. Our verification system requires an exact match to the ID provided, and unfortunately, we weren’t able to complete a virtual verification for out-of-town applicants as another alternative. We’d be more than happy to assist you if you decide to continue, and we’re here if you have any questions. Kindly, The Sound Team
I stopped by earlier in the day to tour, but no agents were available. Mariah, whom was very pleasant at that time, told me she would personally show a townhome if I returned before 5 PM. She also said she would send photos or a video of the home since none were available on the website, but I never received anything. I called later to say I could return around 4:45, and someone again agreed to show “just the one town home,” as they closed at 5 pm.
When I arrived, Mariah’s demeanor was completely different and she appeared visibly perturbed that I was there (she actually slammed her hand on the desk after I walked in). After exiting the office and giving me terse and vague driving directions to meet her at the unit “because [they] were closing soon,” she got into her car, slammed the car door, and sped off down the street. I circled the block multiple times and was unable to located her or her vehicle (I also did not receive a phone call). I eventually had to call and tell the leasing office that I ‘lost’ the agent and to go ahead and cancel the viewing — that call was still before 5 PM. The office staff did apologize and offered to reschedule, but since I was only in town for the day, that was not helpful.
Mariah’s behavior was rude, unprofessional, and immature (I haven’t observed an adult fit like that in some time). I understand it was close to closing time, but this was something she had agreed to knowing I was from out of state. Additionally, a quick walkthrough of the actual unit only takes a few minutes, and I called beforehand to confirm that she could still do it. Overall, the experience was off-putting and left a terrible impression.
Owner response
Hello Marie, we sincerely apologize for your experience—this is not the level of service we aim to provide. We’d be happy to connect you with a Customer Experience Specialist who can share photos of the townhome you were interested in. Please let us know when you’re back in town; we’d truly love the opportunity to welcome you again. Kindly, The Sound Team
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