Icon (Close Menu)

Logout

Apartments on Historic Former School Campus Sell to Little Rock Developer

2 min read

Downtown Dwellings of Little Rock has purchased the historic Eastside Loft Apartments in downtown Little Rock, company co-owner Jill Judy told Arkansas Business.

The sale price was $1.95 million, Judy said. The purchase is supported by a loan from Arkansas Federal Credit Union.

The company, which Judy co-owns with her husband Mark Brown, is known for acquiring, restoring and managing more than 60 historic properties in the area.

Built in 1912, the Eastside Loft building is a 38,087 SF former auditorium on the former Little Rock High School/Eastside Junior High School campus, according to Pulaski County property and Little Rock School District records. The building at 1400 Cumberland St. now has around 34 units.

Downtown Dwellings acquired the former school, located adjacent to the auditorium at 1401 Scott St., for $900,000 in 2013. The 65,062-SF building, built in 1904, is now known as the Lofts at SoMa.

“We are very fortunate to bring this building into the Downtown Dwellings family of properties and excited to have the main original high school reunited with its auditorium,” Judy said.

Foreclosure & Renovation

A federal judge ordered foreclosure of Eastside Loft Apartments in April 2024 after Fannie Mae, short for Federal National Mortgage Association, won a more than $800,000 judgment against Eastside Loft Apartments Phase II Ltd., the former owner of the property at 1400 Cumberland St.

The limited partnership was incorporated in 2005 by The Arc Arkansas, a nonprofit that renovated historic high schools and hospitals to provide affordable, accessible housing for people with developmental disabilities.

Judy said Downtown Dwellings is “unclear” on who the actual seller is.

After winning the building at auction for $1.25 million on Jan. 23, Fannie Mae immediately transferred the property to MF Blue Valley Apartments LLC for $10 on Jan. 27. That LLC is associated with Tarantino Properties of Houston.

Fannie Mae’s original complaint said that the property was in need of immediate repairs. Three of the apartments were “uninhabitable due to extensive mold contamination from a sewer leak in May 2023,” the complaint said.

Judy said the building is only about 40% occupied right now.

“The prior owner did replace the roof and fix the basement, which we are grateful for,” Judy said, adding that there will be renovations to bring the units up to Downtown Dwellings’ standards and new amenities, such as washers and dryers in each unit.

“It’s a building in desperate need of restoration,” she said. “It was rehabbed in 2005 and so it’s a perfect fit for us. The primary systems are still in excellent shape, but it needs good management and a lot of TLC.”

Send this to a friend