Real Estate

7 Luxury Home Sales in the Washington Area—and Who Bought and Sold Them

Details on Washington’s most expensive residential transactions.

Photographs courtesy of HEIDER Real Estate and Niblock Studios.

Maryland

1

Photographs courtesy of HEIDER Real Estate and Niblock Studios.

Where: Potomac.

Bought by: Borzou K. Biabani, owner of the Biabani Group, a commercial real-estate investment firm.

Listed: $3,995,000.

Sold: $4,000,000.

Days on market: 11.

Bragging points: Known as Casa de Amor, the 13,450-square-foot Spanish-style estate has five bedrooms, six bathrooms, three half baths, a two-story great room, a 50-foot-long indoor pool, an observation tower with a glass elevator, a motor court with a fountain, and a gazebo.

2

Photograph by Peter Papoulokos.

Where: Chevy Chase.

Bought by: Andrew L. Baine, an engineer at the blockchain infrastructure platform Bison Trails, and Jennifer G. Baine, a managing director at the investment firm Golden Seeds.

Listed: $5,350,000.

Sold: $4,750,000.

Days on market: 33.

Bragging points: A renovated century-old Colonial with a four-story addition and five bedrooms, three bathrooms, two half baths, a rec room, a workout room, and a backyard with a deck and a garden wall.

 

3

Photograph by Studio Trejos.

Where: Chevy Chase.

Sold by: William F. Magner III, a commercial real-estate investor, and Maria J. Magner.

Listed: $3,975,000.

Sold: $3,725,000.

Days on market: 60.

Bragging points:A 1940s Colonial with five bedrooms, four and a half bathrooms, three fireplaces, a rec room, a flagstone patio, and a grass terrace.

 

DC

4

Where: Georgetown.

Sold by: May Gardner Wilson, a designer at Edith Gregson Interiors, and Charles K. Wilson II.

Listed: $5,000,000.

Sold: $5,000,000.

Days on market: 2.

Bragging points:A renovated 1900 Federal-style house with four bedrooms, three and a half bathrooms, a family room with a wet bar and media center, a fitness room, and a carriage house.

 

5

Where: Dupont Circle.

Sold by: Donald E. Graham, former publisher of the Washington Post.

Listed: $3,200,000.

Sold: $3,050,000.

Days on market: 58.

Bragging points: An 1896 Tudor-style townhouse with four bedrooms, four bathrooms, six fireplaces, and a library.

 

Virginia

6

Photographs courtesy of HEIDER Real Estate and Niblock Studios.

Where: McLean.

Bought by: Embassy of the United Arab Emirates.

Listed: $29,990,000.

Sold: $27,508,500.

Days on market: 1.

Bragging points: A recently constructed 21,800-square-foot estate on more than five acres with six bedrooms, nine bathrooms, four half baths, seven fireplaces, a home theater, a glass-enclosed wine cellar concealing a safe room, a heated marble pool, a fire-pit lounge, a pool house, and two double-height four-car garages.

 

7

Where: McLean.

Bought by: Allison Anne Haupt, a pediatrician.

Listed: $3,280,000.

Sold: $3,150,000

Days on market: 67.

Bragging points: A three-story French-style manor with five bedrooms, four and a half bathrooms, a gym, a saltwater spa, a screened flagstone patio, and a two-level backyard with a treehouse and a 40-foot-long zipline.

This article appears in the December 2025 issue of Washingtonian.

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