Big Brains, Bigger Build: PBA Bets $236M on West Palm’s Future - S. Florida Business & Wealth

Big Brains, Bigger Build: PBA Bets $236M on West Palm’s Future

Palm Beach Atlantic University to fund a transformative new student housing project in West Palm Beach.

Palm Beach Atlantic University has just locked in a $235.8 million tax-exempt bond deal—one of the largest campus-backed financings in Florida this year—to fund a transformative new student housing project in West Palm Beach.

The plan includes 275 residential units totaling 990 beds, a 28,000-square-foot dining hall, a 14,000-square-foot health and wellness facility, and a nine-story parking garage with more than 700 spaces. Construction is expected to begin June 2025 and be completed by mid-2027, replacing two existing residence halls with a more modern, high-density residential campus.

The move comes in response to a striking surge in demand: undergraduate applications to PBA have increased by 510% since 2019. While the private Christian university has experienced steady academic growth, its housing capacity hasn’t kept up—until now. The bond funding ensures the school can meet growing demand while continuing to attract top-tier students to its downtown location.

But the impact stretches beyond campus. This project marks a significant investment in the southern edge of downtown West Palm, signaling the university’s growing role as a long-term urban anchor. It’s a development that blends real estate, education, and municipal finance in a way that few higher-ed institutions of PBA’s size have accomplished.

The bond issuance is structured into $212.7 million in senior bonds and $23.1 million in subordinate bonds, both with 40-year maturities. Issued through the Palm Beach County Health Facilities Authority, the bonds are non-recourse, meaning they are backed by the revenue from the housing project itself—not by the university’s general funds.

The development will be built by Capstone Development Partners, a nationally recognized leader in student housing. While the facilities will remain university-owned, they’ll be managed through a nonprofit 501(c)(3) entity—offering tax advantages and aligning private investment with institutional goals.

In an era of rising interest rates and cautious credit markets, this kind of education-backed, revenue-generating municipal finance is attracting investor confidence. It’s also a sign that institutions like PBA are willing to innovate in order to grow strategically without overextending operational risk.

This is more than a campus expansion—it’s a strategic urban investment. The influx of nearly 1,000 students living downtown year-round will drive local demand for food services, transportation, retail, and hospitality. It also supports long-term workforce development, particularly for employers interested in recruiting from a growing base of educated, mission-driven talent.

For real estate developers, city planners, and financial institutions, this deal illustrates the emerging role of higher education as a real estate catalyst. As mid-sized cities across the U.S. compete for relevance and retention, West Palm is quietly aligning infrastructure and education to power sustainable economic growth.

Palm Beach Atlantic’s bond-backed expansion is more than a facilities upgrade. It’s a statement of intent—that smart institutions can grow enrollment, strengthen brand identity, and invest in their communities all at once. The project also offers a blueprint for how mission-driven, capital-savvy schools can navigate a challenging higher-ed landscape without compromising long-term resilience.

For CEOs and executives across Florida, it’s worth watching closely: the next wave of high-impact economic development might not come from a tech unicorn or private equity-backed skyscraper—but from a university building smarter, higher, and closer to home.

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