Real Capital Solutions to deploy $3.5B on US discounted office properties in next few years

CoStar | January 3rd, 2025

Real Capital Solutions plans to deploy $3.5 billion in mostly all-cash investments on discounted U.S. office properties through 2027, beginning with its first Dallas acquisition: the Tower at Park Lane. The Colorado-based firm purchased the 20-story, more than 500,000-square-foot office tower for $66 million—about 45% of its $120.5 million sale price in 2017—capitalizing on tight bank lending and widespread office market dislocation. RCS is targeting assets priced 40% to 70% below peak values in major markets including Dallas, Austin, Houston, Denver, Florida, Atlanta, Chicago and California, with $1 billion slated for deployment in 2025 alone.

RCS’s strategy centers on acquiring well-located, functional office buildings at low cost bases, allowing the firm to offer competitive rents, generous tenant improvements and leasing incentives. At Tower at Park Lane, purchased for roughly $129 per square foot, the firm plans to invest $13 million in upgrades such as a new lobby, fitness center, speculative suites and back-of-house amenities, while leveraging the property’s walkable access to The Shops at Park Lane. RCS believes strong job growth and in-office work trends in Texas will support leasing demand, giving the firm a competitive advantage as tenants seek stable, well-capitalized ownership amid ongoing market uncertainty.

Real Capital Solutions to deploy $3.5 billion on discounted US office
properties in next few years
Investor says all-cash offer provides competitive edge for its first Dallas office purchase
CoStar
January 3, 2025
By Candace Carlisle

A real estate investment firm that plans to spend $3.5 billion in cash mostly on discounted U.S.
office properties over the next three years has made its first foray into Dallas, with the
purchase of an office tower for roughly 45% of the price from the last time the building sold.
Real Capital Solutions bought the Tower at Park Lane, a 20-story, more than half-a-millionsquare-foot office building at 8750 N. Central Expressway for $66 million in cash. The office
building last traded for $120.5 million in 2017.
The investor based in Colorado is looking for discounted office properties in major U.S. cities
with markdowns ranging from 40% to 70%, in a move banking on the dislocation of the
country’s office market at a time when tenants are demanding space with high-end finishes or
that’s walkable to sought-after retail spots.
The deal marks the first of what could be several purchases that Real Capital plans to make in
Texas markets like Dallas, Austin and Houston in 2025, Chief Acquisitions Officer Adam Abeln
said in an interview. Besides Texas, Real Capital is looking at opportunities in Florida; Atlanta;
Minneapolis; Chicago; and California, he said.
“We are continuing to see opportunities in Dallas, as well as other markets, with a lack of
liquidity on the banking side that has caused an overcorrection of the office market,” Abeln
said.
“A lot of office properties, like the Tower at Park Lane, is functionality sound, but no bank wants
to lend on an office building, and that’s creating quite a bit of opportunities in the next two to
three years.”
The Dallas office tower had been on the market since July 2024, and Real Capital was one of 15
bidders on the property, Abeln said. Real Capital’s all-cash offer helped it get a leg up on other
bidders, Abeln said.
In 2025, Abeln said Real Capital plans to deploy $1 billion into primarily discounted office
properties, with the remainder of the $3.5 billion of capital expected to be spent before the end
of 2027. The firm is able to make all-cash offers on office properties, giving distressed owners a
certainty of closing in a move that has given Real Capital a competitive edge on some deals, he
added.
“We are close to the bottom, if not at the bottom, on the office side, it really depends on the
market, but we are seeing more competition,” Abeln said. “More bidders are coming out,
agreeing with our strategy, but they are going up against our cash bids.”
Along with entering the Texas market, Real Capital has expanded its presence in the Denver
market with the $20 million acquisition of Belleview Tower, a 12-story, more than 200,000-
square-foot office building at 7887 E. Belleview Ave. in Louisville, Colorado. The price tag
represents less than 50% of the property’s 2019 sale price, the firm said.
Business plan
Real Capital is creating a business plan around its office building purchases, with the firm having
a low-cost basis in what is otherwise a competitive offering for tenants circling the market,
Abeln said.
For example, Real Capital bought the Tower at Park Lane in Dallas for about $129 per square
foot, with competitive deals in the city trading for roughly $300 per square foot, he said. That
discount gives Real Capital the ability to offer reduced rental rates to potential office tenants or
additional tenant improvement allowances or a boost of leasing commissions for brokers.
“Tenants are concerned about the financial health of the ownership group behind their office
space and their capital stack,” Abeln said. “They don’t want to lease space in a building about to
go into foreclosure, they want to lease space from a well-capitalized firm. This gives us the
ability to attract tenants from other buildings.”
Real Capital’s Dallas office purchase includes the attached six-story parking garage and is in
walking distance to retail hub The Shops at Park Lane, making Tower at Park Lane closer to
more high-end shopping than any other office building in Dallas, Real Capital said in a
statement.
The building’s largest office tenants include Texas A&M University-Commerce, Match.com and
Topgolf. Topgolf and Texas A&M are expanding their footprint in the building, Real Capital said,
adding that it also plans to deploy a speculative suite program to meet the growing demand for
move-in ready spaces.
Real Capital is planning to invest about $13 million in improvements to the office building, with
a new lobby, fitness center and the addition of a third floor of speculative suites and back-ofhouse amenities meant to elevate the tenant experience, the company said.
Abeln said he’s already noticed that tenants circling the Dallas market want a larger office
space, and Texas hasn’t been as impacted by the shift to remote work because employers in the
state want their employees in the office. He said his firm is already talking to potential tenants
in the Dallas-Fort Worth region about leasing space.
“Dallas is one of the top-five job growth markets in the United States, and the office buildings
haven’t been hit hard on the work-from-home stance,” he added. “A lot of tenants occupy
office space in Dallas compared to other markets.”
For the Record
CBRE’s Russell Ingrum and Patrick Benoist brokered the deal.