Wide environmental shot looking down a commercial building corridor, natural daylight streaming through tall windows at the far end, a principal mid-step reviewing a document in hand, shot from behind at distance to show scale of the space — no staging, no eye contact
Wide environmental shot looking down a commercial building corridor, natural daylight streaming through tall windows at the far end, a principal mid-step reviewing a document in hand, shot from behind at distance to show scale of the space — no staging, no eye contact
— Pratt-Chong Properties Inc

Owners first. Operators always.

The principals who sourced the deal manage the property. That has been true since the first acquisition and it remains true today.

Wide shot of a principal standing inside a vacant commercial unit, natural light from large street-facing windows, the person facing away toward the window reviewing plans or notes, environmental framing shows the room's condition and scale — no posed expression, no eye contact
Wide shot of a principal standing inside a vacant commercial unit, natural light from large street-facing windows, the person facing away toward the window reviewing plans or notes, environmental framing shows the room's condition and scale — no posed expression, no eye contact
/ Direct management

No intermediaries between decision and property

Acquisitions are sourced, underwritten, and closed by the principals. Operations are run by the same people. There is no management layer between the firm and what it owns.

When something needs attention on a property, the person who answers is the person who bought it. That accountability shapes every decision we make.

Hold periods are set by the numbers, not by a fund clock.

Some assets earn a second decade of ownership. Others are sold in year two. The criterion is the same in both cases: what does the return profile say to do now.

Wide exterior facade of a mid-rise mixed-use building on a quiet urban street, shot in natural morning light from across the road, building occupies the right two-thirds of the frame, sidewalk and parked vehicles visible in the foreground — no people, no dramatization
Wide exterior facade of a mid-rise mixed-use building on a quiet urban street, shot in natural morning light from across the road, building occupies the right two-thirds of the frame, sidewalk and parked vehicles visible in the foreground — no people, no dramatization
• Multi-decade track record

Commercial and residential. Every cycle.

The firm has operated through multiple market cycles across office, retail, industrial, and multi-family asset classes. That breadth is not a selling point — it is the record.