A growing number of Greater Boston multifamily properties held by families and long‑term owners for decades are returning to the investment sales market, signaling a generational shift in ownership rather than a sudden change in market fundamentals. The recent listing of a 216‑unit apartment community in Billerica, offered for sale for the first time in roughly 50 years, has become a bellwether for this trend.¹
The property, Parlmont Park Apartments at 10 Parlmont Park, was developed in the 1970s by the same family that has owned and operated it ever since. Now exclusively listed by Matthews, the asset is being marketed as a fully market‑rate community in the North Billerica submarket, just off the I‑495 corridor.² Brokers involved with the offering have emphasized not only its size and location, but also its unusually consistent operational history, with decades of hands‑on ownership and limited capital disruption.³
Industry observers say the appeal of such assets lies in their predictability rather than flash. Parlmont Park’s 216 units—comprised largely of two‑ and one‑bedroom apartments—reflect a product type that investors increasingly favor amid higher interest rates and softer rent growth at the top of the market.⁴ Rather than ground‑up development or heavily repositioned luxury assets, buyers are seeking stable Class B communities where modest renovations can unlock incremental value.
The Billerica listing is not an isolated case. A parallel example can be found in Boston itself, where the Danube Apartments, a scattered‑site portfolio of affordable and workforce housing in Dorchester and Jamaica Plain, recently marked more than 100 years of continuous use and nearly six decades under the same family’s stewardship.⁵ There, long‑term ownership has been sustained through multiple capital cycles via historic tax credits, refinancing, and phased rehabilitation—illustrating how generational holds can coexist with institutional financing tools.
In other cases, long‑held assets are emerging from years of inactivity due to reinvestment rather than sale. In Holden, west of Worcester, a former textile mill complex abandoned for more than three decades was redeveloped into apartments only after ownership changed hands in 2020.⁶ Local officials noted that previous owners had been reluctant to sell, delaying redevelopment until market conditions and financing aligned with a buyer willing to take on both historic preservation and residential conversion.⁷
What distinguishes the current wave of listings, however, is timing. According to recent market research, Greater Boston multifamily investment sales rebounded in 2025, even as rent growth moderated and vacancy edged higher in select submarkets.⁸ Suburban Class B properties in particular have outperformed newer luxury inventory, supported by high home prices, persistent renter demand, and constrained single‑family supply.⁹
In this context, legacy assets like Parlmont Park are drawing interest precisely because they have not been financialized to exhaustion. Many have avoided aggressive rent resets, heavy leverage, or short‑term hold strategies. As one Matthews executive noted in marketing materials, the opportunity for buyers is to “carry forward a legacy asset” while implementing light, phased improvements rather than wholesale repositioning.¹⁰
The re‑emergence of these properties also reflects generational decision‑making. Family owners who developed or acquired assets in the 1970s and 1980s are increasingly weighing estate planning concerns, liquidity events, and operational succession. In some cases, heirs prefer to monetize rather than modernize, particularly as regulatory requirements and capital expenditures grow more complex.
From a pricing perspective, these assets often sit in the middle of the market—large enough to attract institutional interest, but grounded in fundamentals that appeal to private capital. Data from Yardi Matrix and Colliers show that while pricing remains below peak levels, Boston‑area multifamily assets continue to clear the market when they are well located and operationally sound.¹¹
Taken together, the Billerica offering, long‑held Boston portfolios, and previously dormant assets coming back through redevelopment point to a broader changing of the guard in New England multifamily real estate. Rather than distress, the catalyst is continuity: properties built to last, now transitioning to new stewards as one generation steps aside and another prices the future.
- Paul Bubny, “Billerica Apartment Complex Listed for First Time in 50 Years,” Connect CRE, April 14, 2026. [connectcre.com]
- “Matthews Lists 216‑Unit Apartment Portfolio in Billerica After 50 Years of Family Ownership,” Boston Real Estate Times, April 14, 2026. [massdevelopment.com]
- Carol Meyer, “After 50‑Year Legacy, ‘Impeccably Kept’ 216‑Unit Billerica Multifamily Selling via Matthews,” The Real Reporter, April 22, 2026. [nnntriplenet.com]
- Colliers, 24Q4 Greater Boston Multifamily Report, March 4, 2025. [bcbn.org]
- Mark Fogarty, “The First 100 Years of Danube Apartments,” Tax Credit Advisor, September 28, 2022. [newengland…ouncil.com]
- Trea Lavery, “Mill Building, Abandoned for Decades, Transformed into Apartments in Holden,” MassLive, October 2, 2023. [connectcre.com], [bostonreal…etimes.com]
- Ibid.
- Anca Gagiuc, “Boston Multifamily Market Report – February 2026,” Yardi Matrix, February 25, 2026. [linkedin.com]
- Chase Commercial Banking, “Boston Multifamily Market Outlook,” February 26, 2025. [newsbreak.com]
- Bubny, “Billerica Apartment Complex Listed for First Time in 50 Years.” [connectcre.com]
- Yardi Matrix, February 2026; Colliers, 24Q4 2024. [linkedin.com], [bcbn.org]