Tyko Capital closed an $870 million construction loan for Four Seasons Private Residences Lake Austin, advancing a project that has spent years clearing regulatory and market-timing hurdles. The financing lands as Austin's luxury residential infrastructure shifts from urban towers to lakefront branded estates, a pattern visible from Barton Creek to Lake Travis.
The loan finances a mixed-use development anchoring 29 private residences alongside a Four Seasons hotel on a 26-acre lakefront site west of downtown Austin. The property replaces the aging Lake Austin Spa Resort, which closed in 2020. Tyko, a Miami-based lender focused on hospitality and branded-residence construction, structured the facility to match phased delivery of hotel and residential inventory through 2027. The borrower, a joint venture led by Chicago-based Convexity Properties, had previously secured entitlements but delayed construction until financing markets normalized post-2022.
This matters because branded-residence construction debt above $800 million remains rare outside coastal gateway cities, and Austin has never seen a deal of this scale tied to a hotel operator. Tyko's willingness to underwrite nearly $900 million in a secondary Texas market signals allocator confidence in Four Seasons' residential track record—the brand commands 15-20 percent premiums over unbranded comparables in mature markets—and in Austin's evolution as a family-office destination. The city now hosts 12 family offices with assets exceeding $500 million, up from three in 2019, according to state filings. Those principals drive demand for fractional ownership structures and branded property management, which Four Seasons Private Residences provides at Lake Austin through a $40,000 annual fee covering concierge, maintenance, and spa access.
The financing also reflects a broader reallocation within branded-residence capital. Lenders spent 2022 and 2023 repricing hotel-adjacent construction risk after Ritz-Carlton and Aman project delays in Miami and New York. Tyko's loan suggests underwriters now view lakefront leisure properties—where residential sales can absorb cost overruns and hotel performance matters less to debt coverage—as safer than urban mixed-use. Four Seasons operates 53 branded-residence projects globally, with 19 in development. Convexity's structure separates residential closings from hotel opening, allowing unit sales to begin in late 2025 even if the hotel delays into 2027. Presales have not been disclosed, but comparable projects in Naples and Jackson Hole required 40 percent residential commitments before construction loans closed.
Operators and allocators should track three follow-on events. First, Four Seasons will announce presale velocity by mid-2025, revealing whether Austin's family-office migration translates to $8-12 million unit absorption. Second, Convexity will likely syndicate a mezzanine tranche—potentially $120-150 million—to institutional real estate funds seeking hotel-hospitality exposure with residential downside protection. Third, watch for competing branded-residence announcements along the Highway 360 corridor, where Rosewood and Aman have conducted site studies since 2023. A second $500 million-plus project would confirm Austin's graduation from emerging to established branded-residence market.
The Lake Austin loan closes the same week Four Seasons announced a Shura Island partnership with Red Sea Global, underscoring the brand's push into tertiary leisure geographies where residential margins subsidize hotel risk. Austin now competes with Saudi Arabia for the same capital structure.
The takeaway
**$870M** Tyko loan signals branded-residence lenders favor lakefront leisure over urban mixed-use, opening Austin as a family-office test market.
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