Baltimore

Brooklyn Buyer Drops $67.1M On Perry Hall Apartment Complex

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Published on May 19, 2026
Brooklyn Buyer Drops $67.1M On Perry Hall Apartment ComplexSource: Google Street View

A Brooklyn-based investor has taken over a major Perry Hall rental community for $67.1 million, according to state property records. The Crossings at White Marsh in Perry Hall, a 396-unit garden-style complex, was recorded as transferring in April to an entity connected to Rose Valley Capital.

Sale Records And Price

State filings list the deal at $67.1 million, as reported by WBAL NewsRadio. Those records identify the buyer as an entity tied to Rose Valley Capital and show the transfer was officially recorded in April.

Rose Valley's Maryland Push

Rose Valley Capital now includes The Crossings at White Marsh in its portfolio, and the firm's site shows the Perry Hall property among its Maryland holdings. The acquisition adds to the Brooklyn firm’s presence in the Mid-Atlantic market.

Seller History And Price Jump

Industry reporting indicates Continental Realty Corp. had owned the community since 2014, when it acquired the asset from Henderson Global Investors for roughly $29.2 million. Multi-Housing News detailed the 2014 purchase and noted the substantial increase in sale price as the asset changed hands again this spring.

Onsite Management And Resident Amenities

The community's leasing site lists one- and two-bedroom floorplans, two pools, a resident lounge and EV charging among its amenities, and gives the property address as 1 Lincoln Woods Way in Perry Hall. Current leasing information also names Rose Valley Management as the operator and provides residents with a direct contact number and office hours.

Local Market Context

The sale tracks with a broader pattern of selective suburban investment in Baltimore County, where measured development and modest supply growth have kept fundamentals relatively steady. Harbor Stone Advisors' Q1 2026 market report notes that limited new supply in Baltimore County has helped sustain investor interest and support transaction activity in suburban submarkets.

For residents, the ownership change could translate to modest capital projects or adjustments in management rather than immediate upheaval, given the property's class-B profile and existing amenities. This story will be updated if Rose Valley Capital or Continental Realty releases further comment.