Perot Jain is officially moving into Dallas’ most rarefied office address — at Harlan Crow’s Old Parkland campus.
The venture capital firm co-founded by Ross Perot Jr. and Anurag Jain opened a 4,200-square-foot office in Providence Hall, part of the newly built Old Parkland East campus, the Dallas Business Journal reported. The move places the firm inside the latest expansion of the historic Old Parkland complex, a Jeffersonian-style enclave that has become home to some of North Texas’ wealthiest family offices, law firms, private equity shops and foundations.
Perot Jain will consolidate its five-person team in the new space, while maintaining space at Hillwood and the Perot Companies’ Turtle Creek headquarters. The office marks a step forward for the firm, which launched in 2014 and has quietly built a portfolio of roughly 70 companies across logistics, mobility, industrial, defense and sports.
The deal comes as Crow Holdings continues to fill out Old Parkland East, a three-building expansion that added about 285,000 square feet to the campus, according to the publication. Bill Brokaw of Hillwood Urban represented Perot Jain in lease talks, while HPI Real Estate Services’ Ben Cuzen handled the deal for Old Parkland.
Perot Jain partner Aaron Pierce told the outlet that the draw was less about square footage than proximity. Old Parkland’s tight-knit tenant roster has long functioned as an informal deal marketplace, where chance hallway conversations often lead to co-investments. Pierce previously worked on campus before joining Perot Jain and said the collaborative culture remains a differentiator.
Jain sold a majority stake in Access Healthcare to New Mountain Capital in January 2025 in a deal Bloomberg reported to be valued at $2 billion. That firm was later rolled into Smarter Technologies in a reported $6 billion combination, freeing Jain to focus more heavily on venture investing and his family office, which will also operate out of the Old Parkland space.
Perot Jain’s focus is often on early-stage companies generating less than $1 million to a few million dollars in revenue. Its bets range from AI and cyber-defense firm Rilian to Casimir, a startup working on next-generation power technology, along with a stake in the Texas Super Kings cricket team, according to the Business Journal.
The move also highlights Old Parkland’s continued appeal as Dallas’ unofficial capital of private capital. While many office landlords are still fighting vacancies, the campus has leaned into exclusivity, curated tenancy and expansion.
Pierce, who also chairs nonprofit Venture Dallas, told the outlet that he sees the firm’s new home as aligned with a broader regional push. Dallas-Fort Worth companies attracted more than $2 billion in venture funding across 222 deals in 2025, up sharply from the prior year, according to PitchBook-NVCA data.
— Eric Weilbacher
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