210 Taylor St Crooksville Oh 43731 Us E47087150dba862467ed4f74790f2c96
210 Taylor St, Crooksville, OH, 43731, US
Neighborhood Overall
D
Schools-
SummaryNational Percentile
Rank vs Metro
Housing33rdPoor
Demographics31stPoor
Amenities0thPoor
Safety Details
73rd
National Percentile
-32%
1 Year Change - Violent Offense
-7%
1 Year Change - Property Offense

Multifamily Valuation

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The Automated Valuation Model is an estimate of market value. It is not an appraisal, broker opinion of value, or a replacement for professional judgement.
Property Details
Address210 Taylor St, Crooksville, OH, 43731, US
Region / MetroCrooksville
Year of Construction1991
Units33
Transaction Date---
Transaction Price---
Buyer---
Seller---

210 Taylor St, Crooksville OH — 33-Unit Multifamily

Neighborhood occupancy remains elevated and renter concentration is material, supporting demand stability for a 33-unit asset, according to WDSuite’s CRE market data. These indicators apply to the surrounding neighborhood, not the property, and point to steady leasing fundamentals in a lower-cost submarket.

Overview

Located in Crooksville within the Columbus, OH metro, the surrounding neighborhood shows above-median occupancy among metro peers and a meaningful share of renter-occupied housing units. For investors, this translates into a deeper tenant base and support for lease-up and retention, even as pricing remains more accessible than many metro submarkets (per WDSuite’s CRE market data). These figures describe neighborhood conditions, not the subject property.

The asset’s 1991 vintage is newer than the neighborhood’s older housing stock, giving it a relative competitiveness edge versus mid-century properties. That positioning can reduce near-term capital needs while still leaving room for targeted renovations and system updates to refresh interiors and common areas as needed.

Livability is car-oriented with limited nearby retail, parks, and cafes, which places a premium on onsite conveniences and property management. Average school ratings in the neighborhood track below national norms, which may temper appeal for some family renters; pricing and unit functionality typically become the primary decision drivers in similar settings.

Within a 3-mile radius, recent years show a modest population and household dip but projections indicate more households alongside smaller average household sizes. That shift can expand the renter pool and support occupancy stability over time, particularly for practical floor plans and value-oriented units. Elevated ownership costs are not the driver here; rather, lower home values can create some competition with entry-level ownership, making resident experience and affordability important to lease management.

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Safety & Crime Trends

Based on WDSuite’s CRE data, the neighborhood benchmarks in the stronger ranges nationally for overall safety, with property and violent offense estimates placing it in the top quartiles versus neighborhoods nationwide. Recent year-over-year trends indicate declines in both violent and property offense rates. These references describe the broader neighborhood, not the specific block.

Compared with the Columbus metro, the area is competitive on safety metrics, which can aid tenant retention and reduce operational friction. As always, investors should underwrite with current local reports and consider property-level measures that align with resident expectations.

Proximity to Major Employers

Regional employment access is anchored by distribution and business services nodes within commutable distance, supporting workforce renter demand and lease stability. Notable employers include AutoZone’s distribution, Avnet’s services operations, and Xerox’s business services presence.

  • Autozone Distribution Center — distribution & logistics (17.6 miles)
  • Avnet Services — IT services (43.9 miles)
  • Avnet Services - LifeCycle Solutions — IT asset lifecycle solutions (44.0 miles)
  • The Xerox Company — business services & printing technology (44.1 miles)
Why invest?

This 33-unit, 1991-vintage property benefits from a neighborhood with above-median occupancy and a meaningful renter-occupied housing share, supporting leasing durability and renewal prospects. According to CRE market data from WDSuite, the area’s rent-to-income profile indicates limited affordability pressure, which can aid retention while preserving room for measured rent growth tied to unit condition and management quality.

Relative to older local stock, the 1991 construction offers competitive positioning with potential for targeted value-add: unit refreshes, common-area improvements, and energy-efficiency updates. While amenities in the immediate area are sparse and school ratings lag, commutable access to regional employers and a projected increase in household counts within 3 miles suggest a broader tenant base over time. Underwriting should account for potential competition from entry-level ownership and the small-market depth typical of this submarket.

  • Occupancy strength in the surrounding neighborhood supports leasing stability and renewal potential.
  • 1991 vintage provides a relative edge versus older stock, with targeted renovation upside.
  • Rent-to-income dynamics point to manageable affordability pressure, aiding retention and pricing discipline.
  • Commutable access to distribution and business services employers underpins workforce renter demand.
  • Risks: limited local amenities, below-average school ratings, small-market depth, and potential competition from entry-level ownership.