8997 VANTAGE POINT DR, DALLAS, TX, 75243
$41,750,000
2025 Appraised Value
β 5.7% from prior year
LBJ Station presents a classic value-gap red flag masking operational and leverage deterioration. The property commands a $64.6M asking price (127% above comparable units and 54% above appraisal), yet simultaneously pursues aggressive 8-week rent concessions on below-market 1BR unitsβa contradiction suggesting either stale marketing data or distressed leasing velocity. The 168.2% LTV against $41.8M appraised value, paired with absent DSCR documentation and sequential 2025 refinancing by the same lender, signals lender pressure rather than institutional repositioning. Google reviews expose acute operational inconsistency: pest control failures, deposit handling gaps, and staff culture problems persist despite recent management improvements, creating legal and retention risk at scale. Demographics support stabilized workforce-focused demand (69.3% renter occupancy, $65K median income), but transit-dependent positioning (Walk Score 45, Transit Score 56) caps premium rent upside and constrains the narrative supporting current pricing.
Pass. The valuation disconnect, undisclosed refinancing risk, and unresolved operational liabilities outweigh transit location and demographic stability; proceed only if appraisal is revised downward 25%+ or debt terms/DSCR become transparent.
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Look & Lease Special! Newly Reduced Rents Available!
A modern apartment community featuring a private clubhouse, lavish pool, and comprehensive fitness facilities with a wellness-focused environment. Explore our gallery showcasing bright interiors, modern finishes, and vibrant community spaces designed for your lifestyle.
Interior Finishes & Renovation Status
LBJ Station presents a cohesive 2016β2020 renovation program across 82.0% of observed units, with gray stained or dark wood cabinetry paired consistently with quartz or granite countertops and stainless steel appliances. Modern shaker and slab cabinet styles dominate; builder-grade appliance tiers (GE, Whirlpool) are standard. However, one kitchen photo reveals a black coil-top electric range with visible grease buildup and discoloration, signaling either incomplete unit turnover or deferred maintenance on select units. The consistency in flooring (vinyl plank in 23.9% of observations, tile in 13.4%) and fresh paint conditions (52.2%) supports a systematic renovation approach, though three units flagged as "poor" condition warrant further investigation into renovation completion rates.
Physical Condition & Value-Add Positioning
The property qualifies as Class B+ based on 2015 construction, mid-rise architecture, and largely contemporary finishes completed post-2016. Exterior curb appeal is strongβmixed-material facades with cream, orange, and yellow accents paired with well-maintained courtyards, resort-style pool amenity, and mid-to-premium fitness equipment. The 56.7% "excellent" condition rating and fresh paint observations confirm capital discipline. With only 2 of 67 photos documenting unit-level washer/dryer in-unit, there is potential upside in laundry amenitization or continued selective unit upgrades targeting remaining original units.
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LBJ Station's transit access exceeds its walkability profile, creating tenant demand primarily among transit-dependent renters rather than pedestrian-oriented urbanites. With a Walk Score of 45 (car-dependent) but Transit Score of 56 (good transit), the property benefits from proximity to Dallas transit corridorsβlikely the Red or Blue Lineβwithout the street-level amenity density that commands premium rents. The Bike Score of 38 signals limited last-mile connectivity. Without comparable rent data, the location suggests positioning toward service workers or commuters leveraging transit to employment centers (likely downtown or DFW), not affluent walkable-neighborhood seekers. This transit-first profile is lease-stable but caps upside unless nearby development densifies street-level retail and restaurants.
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Construction Pipeline & Supply Risk:
With zero units in the pipeline (0.0% of the 249-unit inventory), LBJ Station faces no near-term supply pressure from new multifamily development. However, the deteriorating submarket vacancy trend suggests demand is already softeningβa dynamic that could become problematic if neighboring markets do eventually deliver units. The absence of competitive supply is a relative strength in a weakening demand environment, but it masks underlying occupancy headwinds unrelated to construction.
No multifamily construction permits found within 3 miles
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Debt & Ownership Summary:
The property carries $68.2M in active debt against a $41.8M appraised valueβ168.2% LTVβsignaling either aggressive repositioning or valuation disconnect. The two $42.0M loans originated three years apart (2022 and 2025) by the same lender suggest sequential refinancing rather than additional capital deployment; absent rate and maturity details, refinancing risk is opaque, but the 2025 transaction timing hints at lender pressure or rate-lock urgency. Infinity Point's 4-year hold with only one prior transaction (2022 acquisition) lacks distress signals but the absentee corporate structure and $168.2M implied debt service burden warrant DSCR scrutinyβthe null estimate is a red flag. The legacy HUD 221(d)(4) loan at 3.48% maturing in 2057 is immaterial ($26.2M, terminated status) relative to the FS Credit exposure.
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LBJ Station is priced as a stabilized, low-cap institutional asset with significant value disconnect from appraisal. The 2.81% estimated cap rate sits 680 basis points below the 9.54% submarket average, while the $259.5K price per unit nearly doubles comparable comps at $114.2Kβa 127% premium absent clear operational outperformance. NOI per unit of $7.3K aligns reasonably with a newer (2015) Class A asset, but the 45% opex ratio is healthy, and 1.99x DSCR suggests modest leverage assumption. The $22.9M gap between appraised value ($41.8M) and estimated sale price ($64.6M) implies either appraisal lag, market optimism, or financing/refinance positioning rather than distressed acquisition opportunity.
Estimated from loan records, rental listings, and appraisal data using industry-standard assumptions.
Based on most recent loan: $42,000,000 (Feb 2025, attom)
Computed from nearby properties within 3 miles of similar vintage
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LBJ Station is a 249-unit, three-story garden-style apartment built in 2015 with 191.4K SF of leasable space and excellent condition throughout. Units feature in-unit washer/dryer, concrete flooring on ground level, and modern finishes including backlit mirrors and USB ports; attached garage parking is standard. The property's primary differentiator is direct pedestrian bridge access to DART transit, positioning it as transit-oriented despite a walk score of 45, with pet screening required but no specified breed/weight restrictions. Amenities are resort-focused (resort-style pool, fitness center, bark park, clubhouse) rather than value-add opportunities.
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LBJ Station is aggressively conceding to move inventory amid soft demand. The property is advertising 8 weeks free rent on 1BR units at $1,109β$401 below the submarket 1BR benchmark of $1,510βindicating either significant quality/location discount or distressed leasing conditions. With only 1 active listing against 249 units but 9 availabilities as of late March 2026, the property is either between lease cycles or struggling to convert prospects; the 8-week concession depth suggests the latter. Asking rents have declined $20 YoY (from $1,129 in August 2025 to current $1,109), pointing to softening momentum rather than stabilization.
Estimated from listed vacancies vs total units
| Unit | Beds | Baths | Sqft | Rent | Status | Listed | Days |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| # 1208 | 1BR | 1 | 809 | $1,186 | Inactive | Oct 28 | 289 |
| # 2308 | 1BR | 1 | 809 | $1,160 | Inactive | Oct 28 | 289 |
| # 6212 | 1BR | 1 | 768 | $1,149 | Inactive | Oct 27 | 290 |
| 1BR | 1 | 686 | $1,145 | Inactive | Sep 24 | 181 | |
|
Apr $1,129
β
Aug $1,129
β
Sep $1,145
(β1.4%)
|
|||||||
| # 4309 | 1BR | 2 | 735 | $1,117 | Inactive | Oct 29 | 288 |
| # 4322 | 1BR | 1 | 768 | $1,105 | Inactive | Oct 27 | 290 |
| # 2306 | 1BR | 1 | 809 | $1,070 | Inactive | Oct 27 | 290 |
| # 4304 | 1BR | 1 | 679 | $1,061 | Inactive | Oct 27 | 290 |
| # 2304 | 1BR | 1 | 686 | $1,055 | Inactive | Oct 27 | 290 |
| # 2213 | 1BR | 1 | 667 | $1,026 | Inactive | Oct 27 | 290 |
| Apt 5302 | 1BR | 1 | 667 | $1,011 | Inactive | Oct 27 | 290 |
| # 1003 | 1BR | 1 | 667 | $1,004 | Inactive | Oct 28 | 289 |
| Apt 5114 | 1BR | 1 | 686 | $989 | Inactive | Oct 27 | 290 |
| # 4310 | 1BR | 1 | 679 | $987 | Inactive | Oct 27 | 290 |
| # 3214 | 1BR | 1 | 686 | $969 | Inactive | Oct 27 | 290 |
| A1 | 1BR | 1 | 667 | β | Inactive | Mar 24 | β |
| A2 | 1BR | 1 | 679 | β | Inactive | Mar 24 | β |
| A3 | 1BR | 1 | 710 | β | Inactive | Mar 24 | β |
| A4 | 1BR | 1 | 768 | β | Inactive | Mar 24 | β |
| A5 | 1BR | 1 | 809 | β | Inactive | Mar 24 | β |
| B1 | 2BR | 2 | 809 | β | Inactive | Mar 24 | β |
| B2 | 2BR | 2 | 875 | β | Inactive | Mar 24 | β |
| B3 | 2BR | 2 | 961 | β | Inactive | Mar 24 | β |
| B4 | 2BR | 2 | 1,015 | β | Inactive | Mar 24 | β |
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LBJ Station captures a workforce-to-middle-market renter base with strong affordability tailwinds in its immediate 1-mile submarket. The 1-mile radius shows 69.3% renter occupancy and a 24.3% affordability ratioβtighter than the 3-mile (20.9%) and 5-mile (20.1%) ringsβindicating the property sits in a rent-constrained urban core where $65.0K median household income supports mid-market product. Income distribution skews lower locally: 37.5% of 1-mile households earn under $50K versus 38.2% at 3-mile and 32.9% at 5-mile, signaling limited upside to premium rent positioning. The 14.3 percentage point gap in sub-$25K earners (1-mile vs. 5-mile) suggests gentrification risk or transit-oriented workforce concentration, but current fundamentals support stabilized multifamily demand rather than value-add upside.
Source: US Census ACS 5-Year Estimates (2023) Β· 4 tracts (1mi)
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Unit Mix Analysis β LBJ Station
This data set is incomplete and unusable for meaningful analysis. The property shows 249 total units but the unit_mix object accounts for only 15 units (all one-bedroom), leaving 234 units unclassified. Without the full bedroom distribution, average rents by type, and comparable market data, we cannot assess concentration risk, pricing power, or demographic alignment. Request corrected property detail page with complete unit inventory breakdown before proceeding.
Estimated from 15 listed units (6.0% of 249 total)
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Pet screening is a required part of the application process for all applicants. A third-party screening service is used to ensure all residents understand pet and animal-related policies and create formalized policy acknowledgments.
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LBJ Station shows modest appreciation despite tight cap rates. The property appraised at $41.75M in 2025 ($167.7K/unit), up 5.7% YoY, with improvements comprising 91.5% of total value and land just $3.52M. The low land-to-total ratio (8.5%) and recent 2015 construction limit near-term redevelopment optionality; value accretion will depend on operational performance rather than land play. Single-year data obscures whether 5.7% growth reflects market rebound, cap rate compression, or rent momentum, warranting comparison to local multifamily benchmarks and the acquisition basis.
| Year | Total Value | Change |
|---|---|---|
| 2025 | $41,750,000 | +5.7% |
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LBJ Station's review profile reveals a bimodal distribution masking acute operational inconsistency. The 3.6 overall rating is heavily skewed by 53 one-star reviews (29.1% of base) concentrated on pest control, deposit disputes, and staff responsiveness, while 105 five-star reviews (57.7%) praise recent management turnover. The 6-month trend is marginally positive (4.0 vs. 3.9), but this masks volatile month-to-month swingsβrecent months show simultaneous 5-star operational praise and damning 1-star complaints about maintenance and leasing friction. This polarization suggests management has improved service delivery for engaged residents while failing systematic issues (roach infestation cited explicitly, deposit handling failures) and front-desk culture; individual staff champions (Eva, Darielle, Suzanne) are carrying a weak underlying operational framework. The review pattern materially undermines investment thesis: pest and deposit problems signal either capital deferred maintenance or systemic compliance gaps that new management hasn't resolved, creating legal/retention risk at a 249-unit scale.
182 reviews total
Never expect your deposit back.My car was towed and no one answered me.
The office people where really nice and straightforward and understanding Eva and Ariel where very nice and willing to work with my situation and made my leasing experience very peasant ππΎ
Please save yourself the headache, and donβt move here , the staff is rude and has no problem solving abilities, the environment itβs self is horrible , the valet trash man got jumped and robbed at gun point and nothing was done about the situation. The complex knit picks little things but the apartments arent even be up to par . Please save yourself the time and headache and move somewhere else
This is Mr Spencer. I just would like to say that I appreciate the new management, Darielle is great, and these apartments have upgraded so much better since she has been here. Much respect for Darielle and the apartments, keep doing ya'll thing..ππΏπ―
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