Marc Andreessen, co-founder of venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz (a16z), has reaffirmed his strong backing of Flow, the real estate startup founded by former WeWork CEO Adam Neumann, announcing he is “doubling down” on the company’s vision and performance. Although no new dollar amount was disclosed, Andreessen has previously invested $350 million into Flow—the firm's largest single investment to date—and has participated in at least one follow-on funding round.
In a recent a16z blog post, Andreessen praised Flow’s approach to reinventing rental housing through technology, brand, and community, stating that the company “crushes market benchmarks” in revenue and profitability. He emphasized that Flow’s unique model—which blends high-end physical spaces with a tech-enabled, neighbor-focused resident experience—is creating a brand unlike anything in traditional real estate.
Flow launched in April 2024 with a major campaign and the debut of its first apartment tower in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Since then, it has expanded its portfolio to include more than 3,000 apartments across Florida, Georgia, and Tennessee, and has launched the first phase of Flow Miami, a 44-story apartment tower. A second tower on the site, branded Flow House, will include 446 for-sale condos and is expected to be completed later this year.
In addition to residential offerings, Flow is broadening its scope. It owns land in Miami Worldcenter, a massive mixed-use development in Downtown Miami, where future retail and office projects are rumored. It has also been active in the land acquisition market—paying $71 million for a 16-acre Miami parcel zoned for up to 2,380 units, and $116 million for a suburban office site where it has approvals for a 29-story residential tower.
Internationally, Flow is expanding into Saudi Arabia with plans for both condo and apartment developments. The brand is also exploring the use of blockchain technology in real estate, part of Neumann’s broader ambition to merge innovation with physical spaces to foster deeper resident engagement.
Flow’s value proposition, according to both Neumann and Andreessen, goes beyond physical real estate—it’s about building communities. Andreessen argued that in a world increasingly dominated by digital abstraction, creating meaningful physical environments that enhance human connection is more essential than ever.
The startup, currently valued at around $2.5 billion following its Series B raise in April 2025, also launched Workflow, a coworking concept, last year—marking Neumann’s second attempt at flexible office solutions following his ouster from WeWork.
Flow is also refining its portfolio strategy, reportedly negotiating the sale of its stake in a 425-unit Atlanta apartment tower to multifamily giant Cortland.
With Andreessen’s continued support and an aggressive growth plan across housing, coworking, and international markets, Flow is positioning itself as a bold, tech-infused challenger to conventional real estate models—aiming to deliver not just places to live, but places to belong.