Crest City Capital gives accredited investors a boutique seat at the same 506(c) value-add deals the firm has been running for 10 years across Massachusetts, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina and Maryland, and the founder personally signs off on every one of them before your dollars go in.
Crest City Capital is a boutique private equity and real estate development firm headquartered in Boston that has spent the last decade closing every single one of the 189 multifamily acquisitions it underwrote, and that discipline is what your capital gets behind when you come in as an LP.
Your money goes into value-add Sunbelt multifamily deals that the founder has personally underwritten, in metros where jobs and rental demand have been compounding since 2020, inside a fully in-house operating team that handles acquisition, underwriting, asset management and construction oversight without outsourcing any of the work that determines whether the deal delivers or not.
Crest City has underwritten 189 multifamily deals across the last 10 years and has closed every single one of them, which means your capital never sits in a commitment that gets walked away from at the last minute.
Brad Cangiamila personally reviews every acquisition before it reaches LP review, and the 15-minute intake call sits with him directly instead of getting routed through a junior analyst or a third-party IR desk.
Your allocation goes into value-add multifamily in Atlanta, Columbia, Baltimore and Cary, metros that have been absorbing Northeast migration and compounding rents for several years and are still pricing below where institutional bidders are willing to play.
The current allocation prioritizes value-add multifamily in the Sunbelt migration corridor and selective Boston-area development, and the full deal memo with underwriting assumptions and property-level financials becomes available once accreditation is verified under SEC rules.
You sit down directly with Brad Cangiamila and go through the current Sunbelt acquisition, the underwriting assumptions the team ran, where the capital stack sits, and whether the allocation fits inside the broader real estate sleeve you are already building, all in a single briefing call with no pitch deck and no follow-up pressure.