| Summary | National Percentile | Rank vs Metro |
|---|---|---|
| Housing | 65th | Best |
| Demographics | 76th | Best |
| Amenities | 37th | Good |
Multifamily Valuation
| Property Details | |
|---|---|
| Address | 9967 Darrow Park Dr, Twinsburg, OH, 44087, US |
| Region / Metro | Twinsburg |
| Year of Construction | 1991 |
| Units | 27 |
| Transaction Date | --- |
| Transaction Price | --- |
| Buyer | --- |
| Seller | --- |
9967 Darrow Park Dr Twinsburg Multifamily Investment
Neighborhood-level occupancy is competitive among Akron submarkets, supporting stable renter demand according to WDSuite’s CRE market data. Investor focus centers on maintaining pricing power while monitoring a moderate renter-occupied share measured at the neighborhood level.
Twinsburg’s suburban setting pairs commuter convenience with day-to-day services, with grocery and pharmacy access ranking above the metro median (ranks 69 and 22 out of 180 neighborhoods). Dining and park density are thinner locally, which places a premium on property amenities and quick drives to nearby retail corridors rather than walkable options.
From an income and housing perspective, the neighborhood rates strongly within the Akron metro. Demographics performance sits in the top quartile among 180 metro neighborhoods, and housing fundamentals also rank in the top quartile, signaling steady household formation and demand depth relative to peers. Neighborhood occupancy trends are competitive among Akron neighborhoods (rank 45 of 180; national percentile 81), a constructive backdrop for lease stability at nearby assets. Note that these occupancy metrics are measured for the neighborhood, not the property.
Within a 3-mile radius, population and household counts have been rising and are projected to continue growing through 2028, indicating a larger tenant base and support for absorption. Higher-income households are well represented in the 3-mile trade area, which can underpin collections and renewal potential, while the neighborhood’s renter-occupied share (about one-third of housing units) suggests a meaningful pool of multifamily renters without overreliance on any single segment.
Home values in the neighborhood are elevated for the region, which typically sustains rental demand as some households favor multifamily options over ownership. Median contract rents remain aligned with area incomes, helping manage affordability pressure and aiding retention strategies at stabilized properties.

Comparable crime statistics were not available in the dataset for this neighborhood. Investors commonly benchmark neighborhood safety to metro and national trends when data is available and incorporate on-the-ground diligence to understand block-level dynamics over time.
The area draws on a diverse employment base that supports renter demand and commuting convenience, including logistics, rail operations, industrial gases, and major corporate offices noted below.
- Home Depot Distribution Center — logistics (3.5 miles)
- Norfolk Southern Motor Yard — rail operations (4.38 miles)
- Airgas Merchant Gases — industrial gases (11.7 miles)
- Parker-Hannifin — diversified industrials (11.8 miles) — HQ
- Progressive — insurance (13.83 miles) — HQ
This 27-unit suburban asset benefits from neighborhood occupancy that is competitive among Akron peers and a growing 3-mile renter pool, supporting stable leasing and collections. Elevated ownership costs in the immediate area tend to reinforce reliance on multifamily housing, while rent levels remain generally aligned with area incomes, which can aid retention. According to CRE market data from WDSuite, the neighborhood’s housing and demographic scores are strong relative to the metro, pointing to resilient fundamentals for well-managed assets.
Forward-looking 3-mile projections indicate continued increases in population and households through 2028, expanding the tenant base and supporting absorption. The trade area’s higher-income profile can bolster credit quality, though thinner dining and park density nearby means property-level amenities and access to regional retail will matter for leasing velocity.
- Competitive neighborhood occupancy supports income stability
- 3-mile population and household growth expands the renter base
- Elevated ownership costs sustain multifamily demand and pricing power
- Higher household incomes in the trade area support collections and renewals
- Risk: limited nearby dining/park density places more weight on property amenities