1180 N MASTERS DR, DALLAS, TX, 752173771
$11,600,000
2025 Appraised Value
↑ 7.9% from prior year
Crawford Park presents a classic operational turnaround with meaningful execution risk: the 144-unit 2005-vintage asset trades at a 10.59% cap rate ($11.6M, $80.6K/unit)—200–250 bps above Dallas Class B stabilized comps—driven by structural rent depression (2BR units 21% below market) and recent deterioration in resident satisfaction (post-occupancy ratings collapsed to 3.0 from 5-star leasing-phase scores). The underlying financial case is sound: 45% opex ratio, 2.1% vacancy, and no debt provide a clean platform for margin expansion through rent normalization and kitchen modernization (~35% of units remain builder-grade), with zero near-term refinancing pressure from the long-term owner. However, endemic operational issues—management turnover, security failures, and alleged violent crime cited in resident reviews—suggest either mismanagement or genuine neighborhood deterioration that directly undermines the rent-up thesis; the 71 Walk Score masks weak transit connectivity (37 Transit Score) and undifferentiated positioning for price-sensitive renters. The 7.1% land value and garden-style architecture also constrain upside relative to mid-rise comps.
Directional Read: Watch List with Heavy Due Diligence Requirement. The 200+ bps cap rate spread and partial renovation pathway justify further investigation, but the bimodal review distribution and resident safety concerns are material red flags that require on-site management assessment, crime data validation, and market rent verification before advancing. If operational issues are management-driven rather than structural, this is a 150–200 bps cap compression candidate; if neighborhood conditions are deteriorating, it's a pass.
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SPRING INTO CRAWFORD PARK! Lets Bloom together.
Discover an exceptional apartment home in Crawford Park in Dallas, Texas. This vibrant community places you near various culinary experiences to satisfy every craving and unique shopping centers filled with treasures to explore. For fun and excitement, a nearby water and adventure park awaits, perfect for thrilling outings. Plus, with easy access to Interstates 20 and 45, the historic charm of the Dallas Downtown Historic District is just a short drive away! Explore our affordable one, two, and three-bedroom apartments for rent, thoughtfully designed with your lifestyle in mind.
Class B property with selective unit-level updates and strong exterior condition. Crawford Park's 144 units exhibit a bifurcated renovation profile: ~39% of observed finishes are upgraded (primarily 2015–2020 era), while 35% remain builder-grade with original honey-oak cabinets and laminate countertops from 2005. Paint condition is consistently fresh (66% of observations), and the red brick exterior with pitched roofs shows no deferred maintenance. The fitness center and resort-style pool are well-maintained, though kitchen appliances remain builder-grade white across most units, presenting clear value-add potential through kitchen modernization. Surface parking and garden-style architecture limit upside positioning relative to mid-rise Class A comps.
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Location Profile Misaligned with Rent Positioning
The 71 Walk Score supports convenience-oriented tenant demand, but the 37 Transit Score and 47 Bike Score reveal meaningful infrastructure gaps for a $1.32K/month product competing in Dallas's midmarket. "Very Walkable" typically supports 15–20% rent premium in comparable metros, yet the weak transit access (below 40) and limited bike infrastructure limit appeal to car-free or car-lite renters who increasingly justify rent at this level. Without proximity data to employment centers or granular amenity density, this location likely serves price-sensitive residents prioritizing walkable retail/dining over transit-dependent commute patterns—a positioning that should be stress-tested against nearby supply with stronger transit connectivity.
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No meaningful supply threat exists at this asset. With 0.0% pipeline penetration and zero nearby construction projects, Crawford Park faces no direct competitive pressure from new deliveries—a material advantage given the submarket's deteriorating vacancy trend, which likely reflects demand softness rather than oversupply. This positioning supports pricing power if broader market conditions stabilize.
No multifamily construction permits found within 3 miles
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Crawford Park shows minimal refinancing risk but raises acquisition concerns. The 24-year hold with a single transaction suggests a stabilized, long-term owner rather than a motivated seller—the absentee company structure and 2001 acquisition date indicate this is likely a buy-and-hold institutional or family vehicle. With no debt recorded, the property carries zero leverage at an implied $80.6K per unit valuation, which is conservative for a 2005-vintage 144-unit asset. The absence of loan data prevents DSCR analysis, but the clean capital structure and extended ownership duration signal neither distress nor near-term refinancing pressure that would accelerate a sale.
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Crawford Park trades at a 10.59% implied cap rate—a 200–250 bps premium to stabilized Dallas Class A/B comps, signaling value-add or distressed positioning despite 2005 vintage. NOI per unit of $8.5K sits below market ($10K–$12K for Class B stabilized), while the 45% opex ratio is healthy, suggesting operational inefficiency rather than structural cost issues. The $11.6M appraised value versus implied $11.6M sale price (derived from 10.59% cap) shows no value disconnect, but the 2.1% vacancy and $2.0K property tax per unit indicate either below-market rents or a market recovery play. Core thesis: near-term margin expansion through rent normalization or expense tightening could push 10.59% cap down 150–200 bps toward market stabilization.
Estimated from loan records, rental listings, and appraisal data using industry-standard assumptions.
Computed from nearby properties within 3 miles of similar vintage
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Crawford Park is a 144-unit garden-style apartment community built in 2005 with wood-frame construction and brick exterior, housed across 2 stories with 140.9K SF of net leasable area. The property maintains excellent condition and quality ratings, featuring unit-level amenities including in-unit washer/dryer connections, fully-equipped kitchens with dishwashers, and walk-in closets, alongside community amenities including fitness center, pool, and gated access with covered parking. Located in Dallas with a Walk Score of 71 and 4.2 Google rating, the property sits near I-20 and I-45 with proximity to downtown Dallas. Pets are permitted (limit 2 per unit, breed/weight restrictions apply); no utilities are included in rent.
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Crawford Park is underperforming market rents across all unit types, signaling weak pricing power. One-bedrooms rent at $1,288 versus a $1,271 market benchmark—essentially flat—while two-bedrooms lag $311 at $1,179 versus $1,490, and three-bedrooms trail $610 at $1,495 versus $2,105. With only 3 active listings against 144 units and no active concessions, the property appears to have limited leasing velocity; the March 22 snapshot showed 7 available units (4.9% availability). The $47.8 rent spread between current asking ($1,320.7) and prior snapshot ($1,273.9) suggests recent price adjustments upward, though rents remain structurally depressed relative to comps.
Estimated from listed vacancies vs total units
Min/avg/max asking rents from property website
| Unit | Beds | Baths | Sqft | Rent | Status | Listed | Days |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3BR | 2 | 1,183 | $1,495 | Active | Mar 22 | — | |
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Mar $1,499
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| 1BR | 1 | 700 | $1,288 | Active | Mar 22 | — | |
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Mar $975
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| 2BR | 2 | 983 | $1,179 | Active | Mar 22 | — | |
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Mar $1,179
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| — | BR | 2 | — | $1,285 | Inactive | May 3 | 9 |
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Affordability red flag at property-level, but supported by broader renter concentration. At $1.32K monthly rent, Crawford Park's 23.3% affordability ratio within the 1-mile radius is tight relative to median HHI of $55.5K, creating vulnerability to income-sensitive renters. However, the 3-mile radius widens the addressable market materially: 40.0% renter occupancy and $58.7K median income yield a healthier 27.3% ratio, indicating sufficient depth beyond the immediate micromarket. Income distribution skews workforce (42.2% earn <$50K across the 3-mile ring), not affluent, limiting pricing power; the property relies on demand from middle-income renters rather than upscale tenants. Suburban ring stability (5-mile median HHI of $59.7K with 39.9% renters) suggests demographic stickiness, though the flat-to-modest income growth from 1-mile outward signals mature, not growth-driven, demand.
Source: US Census ACS 5-Year Estimates (2023) · 4 tracts (1mi)
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Pets Welcome Upon Approval. Breed restrictions apply. Limit of 2 pets per home. Weight restrictions apply. Please call for details.
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Current appraised value of $11.6M yields $80.6K per unit—reasonable for a 2005-vintage Class B asset in the Dallas market. The 7.9% year-over-year appreciation suggests stable demand, though a single appraisal snapshot prevents assessment of longer-term trajectory or volatility. Land represents 7.1% of total value ($817K), which is low and typical for stabilized multifamily; this constrains redevelopment optionality and indicates the value driver is the operating asset itself, not the real estate basis.
| Year | Total Value | Change |
|---|---|---|
| 2025 | $11,600,000 | +7.9% |
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Rating trajectory masks deteriorating resident satisfaction and persistent operational issues. The 4.2 overall rating is inflated by 63.2% of reviews being 5-stars, nearly all from the leasing phase (2023-2024); post-occupancy sentiment has collapsed to 3.0 in the last 6 months, up marginally from 2.3 prior. Resident 1-star reviews cite endemic problems—violent crime ("shootings 5X a week"), management turnover creating inconsistent enforcement, poor communication, and chronic security failures—that directly contradict the leasing-stage praise for individual staff members like Michelle and Ericka. The bimodal distribution (11 1-stars, 36 5-stars, only 1 4-star) signals a broken customer experience: the property sells well on personal rapport but fails to deliver on basic safety and habitability post-move-in, indicating either mismanagement of resident expectations or genuine deterioration under current ownership.
48 reviews total
I'm Miss Pearson a resident of 3 years and the new staff is courteous and kind. I hope they stay a while. Nakesah and Lyric. THIS is The Worst Place 😫 Ever Shooting 5X A Week No Security In Place Small Chilren Keep Inside BREAK in Regular Cars Left Un Attend. AUTO THEFT
Owner response · Sep 2023
Hello Shantha, thanks for the positive feedback! We're always happy to hear good things from our residents.
I miss Ms.k she was better then the manager now the manager we have now she do wayyy too much she’s always trying to put somebody out!! DO NOT LIVE HERE If you want a good environment, they do not fix nothing around here at ALL!!
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