A Denver-based investor is planting a flag in one of Fort Worth’s busiest mixed-use corridors, scooping up a 589-unit apartment complex at the center of a fast-growing district.
Bow River Capital said Wednesday that it acquired the LeftBank apartments at 600 Harrold Street. The price wasn’t disclosed, but the deal adds a sizable North Texas property to the firm’s newly launched multifamily-focused fund, according to the Dallas Business Journal, which first reported the sale.
JLL Capital Markets arranged acquisition financing, securing a five-year, fixed-rate loan backed by Fannie Mae and serviced by JLL Real Estate Capital. The deal closed this month, though Tarrant County property records have yet to reflect the sale. The property carried a 2025 appraised value of nearly $11.3 million, a figure that likely trails its market pricing.
The seller, 600 Harrold FW, is tied to Madera Residential, a Texas-based operator active across the Sun Belt.
Completed in 2018, the four-story complex offers a mix of studio through four-bedroom units. Amenities include a fitness center, pool, bowling lounge and co-working space, along with a dog park, guest suites and garage parking — tailored to renters drawn to walkable, amenity-rich districts.
LeftBank sits within the broader 1.5 million-square-foot Left Bank development along West Seventh Street, one of Fort Worth’s most active urban corridors, according to the publication. The area packs in more than 50 restaurants, a Tom Thumb grocery store and direct access to the Trinity Trails, helping it compete with Dallas’ more established live-work-play hubs.
The submarket is also seeing a fresh wave of development. Projects like the Crescent expansion, Van Zandt and Westside Village are adding density and pushing further institutional interest into the district, according to the outlet.
JLL’s debt advisory team — including Leon McBroom, Rob Bova, Lauren Dow and Ellie Savage — represented Bow River.
Bow River, which manages about $3 billion across private equity, real estate and software, has historically focused on the Rocky Mountain West and Southwest.
— Eric Weilbacher
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