Prime Residential Pays $69M for Silicon Valley Asset

JLL Capital Markets arranged the sale and financing.

Photo of low-rise apartment building with pool, deck chairs and beach umbrellas in the foreground.
Citra was built in 1968 and renovated in 2019. Image courtesy of JLL Capital Markets

Prime Residential has purchased Citra, a 147-unit value-add multifamily community in Sunnyvale, Calif. The purchase price was $68.5 million, according to SiliconValley.com.

Citra was previously owned by Pacific Urban Investors, which purchased it for about $50 million in 2014, according to Yardi Matrix, which reported the community’s occupancy at 92.5% as of June.

JLL Capital Markets represented the seller and arranged a $44.2 million Freddie Mac loan.


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The asset was built in 1968 and renovated in 2019. Of the property’s one- and two-bedroom units, 133 are fully renovated. Amenities include fitness and business centers, in-unit washers and dryers, a pool and spa, community and media rooms, children’s play areas, and outdoor barbecue and picnic areas.

Citra’s location at 745 S Bernardo Ave. places it less than 5 miles from Google’s Mountain View headquarters and about 6 miles from Apple Park in Cupertino.

San Jose’s growing supply

About $1 billion in San Jose-area multifamily assets changed owners last year, according to a Yardi Matrix report which places the average price per unit at $434,956. Citra traded for slightly above that average, coming in at about $466,986 per unit.

Another multifamily community that changed hands in recent months was Levare, a 108-unit asset that Hines purchased in May from Federal Realty Investment Trust for about $74 million. That property fetched a higher-than-average $684,259 per unit.

Silicon Valley continues to see new multifamily developments, with 280 units under construction and 7,638 in the planning or permitting stages, according to Yardi Matrix.