- PGIM Real Estate Fund acquired The Arbor, a 127-unit apartment community in the Bronx’s Riverdale neighborhood, for $73.5M through a joint venture with Fetner Properties.
- The acquisition follows the fund’s April 2026 conversion to an interval fund structure and brings total deployed capital to roughly $260M across more than $632M in gross property value.
- The deal underscores continued institutional appetite for multifamily housing tied to essential demand sectors, particularly in supply-constrained New York City markets.
According to AltsWire, PGIM Real Estate Fund is doubling down on New York multifamily with a $73.5M acquisition in the Bronx. The fund purchased The Arbor, a 127-unit housing community in Riverdale, marking its 10th property acquisition since launch.
PGIM partnered with Fetner Properties on the deal through a sale-leaseback transaction with Columbia University, the seller. The firms plan to reposition the property through a phased value-add renovation program beginning in July 2026.
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A Milestone Acquisition
The Bronx multifamily acquisition arrives just weeks after PGIM Real Estate Fund converted from a tender offer fund into an interval fund structure in April 2026. The fund remains taxed as a REIT, but PGIM said the new structure creates a more predictable liquidity framework for investors through mandatory quarterly repurchase offers.
The Riverdale purchase also represents a portfolio milestone. According to PGIM, the fund has now deployed approximately $260M across assets representing more than $632M in gross property value.
The Details
The Arbor consists of 127 apartment units in Riverdale, one of the Bronx’s higher-income residential enclaves with limited new housing supply. Under the joint venture agreement, PGIM and Fetner Properties will oversee capital improvements and re-lease apartments in two phases as units become available.
Financial terms beyond the $73.5M purchase price were not disclosed. Columbia University previously owned the property, though the university’s plans following the sale were not detailed.
PGIM Real Estate’s broader investment platform manages roughly $217B in gross assets under management and administration, according to the firm. Parent company PGIM, the asset management arm of Prudential Financial, oversees approximately $1.4T in AUM globally.
Why Bronx Multifamily Still Attracts Capital
Institutional investors continue targeting multifamily housing despite elevated interest rates and softer transaction volume across several CRE sectors. Housing assets tied to “essential demand” have remained a favored allocation theme among large managers seeking durable cash flow and inflation protection.
PGIM executives framed the acquisition within that strategy. Soultana Reigle, head of US equity for PGIM’s real estate investment group, said the firm continues prioritizing sectors including housing and logistics that can generate resilient income across market cycles.
The Bronx has increasingly drawn value-add investors seeking lower costs than Manhattan and Brooklyn. That demand persists even as Bronx multifamily landlords face mounting operational pressures from housing court delays and case backlogs. According to CBRE’s 2026 New York multifamily outlook, institutional buyers remain active in outer-borough apartment deals.
Why It Matters
The deal shows how interval funds are gaining influence in private real estate investing. Traditional open-end funds often face redemption pressure during volatile markets. In contrast, interval funds offer scheduled liquidity windows. Managers say that structure improves portfolio stability.
For PGIM, the acquisition reflects confidence in New York housing fundamentals. Many office and transitional assets still face pressure. Meanwhile, multifamily continues attracting institutional capital. Persistent housing shortages and stable occupancy support investor demand.
The transaction also highlights a growing trend among universities and nonprofits. Many institutions now use sale-leaseback deals to unlock capital. At the same time, they maintain operational flexibility and long-term property access.
What’s Next
PGIM and Fetner Properties are expected to begin re-leasing renovated apartments at The Arbor in July 2026 as renovations progress in phases. Market watchers will likely track whether the value-add strategy can capture stronger rents in Riverdale while maintaining occupancy during the renovation process.
More broadly, investors will be watching whether PGIM’s newly converted interval fund accelerates acquisitions in multifamily and logistics. With more than $632M in gross property value already assembled, the fund appears positioned to continue scaling its portfolio during a period when many competitors remain cautious on deployment.


