The investment was announced in a
blog post by Marc Andreessen, co-founder and general partner at the venture capital firm. The blog did not disclose the financial details of the investment.
“Adam is a visionary leader who revolutionized the second largest asset class in the world – commercial real estate,” Andreessen wrote.
In 2019, Neumann agreed to resign as chief executive officer of WeWork and give up majority voting control of the company after Japanese conglomerate SoftBank Group Corp and other shareholders turned on him over a plunge in the company’s estimated valuation ahead of a planned initial public offering.
WeWork ultimately went public last year through a merger with a special purpose acquisition company in a deal that valued the office-sharing startup at $9 billion, a steep drop from the $47 billion it was worth in 2019.
Andreessen Horowitz and Flow did not immediately respond to Reuters’ requests seeking additional comment.
Discover the stories of your interest
Flow’s website does not offer much details about its business, except that it is scheduled to launch in 2023.
According to a Wall Street Journal report in January, Neumann had acquired majority stakes in over 4,000 apartments, valued at $1 billion altogether.