An 11,000-square-foot home originally custom-built for Fox News host Brett Baier and his wife in Northwest has sold to D.C. restaurateur Ashok Bajaj for $7.1 million.
The 11,000-square-foot, five-bedroom home originally custom-built for Fox News host Bret Baier and his wife Amy in Northwest D. C.s exclusive Phillips Park neighborhood 14 years ago, has sold for $7.1 million.
(Courtesy TTR Sothebys International/Derek & Vee Photography)
Courtesy TTR Sothebys International/Derek & Vee Photography
It’s one of the 10 most-expensive home sales in D.C. this year.
(Courtesy TTR Sothebys International/Derek & Vee Photography)
Courtesy TTR Sothebys International/Derek & Vee Photography
The seller of the Phillips Park home was a trust affiliated with investor and entrepreneur George D. Crowley, Jr.
(Courtesy TTR Sothebys International/Derek & Vee Photography)
Courtesy TTR Sothebys International/Derek & Vee Photography
The 11,000-square-foot, five-bedroom home originally custom-built for Fox News host Bret Baier and his wife Amy in Northwest D. C.s exclusive Phillips Park neighborhood 14 years ago, has sold for $7.1 million.
(Courtesy TTR Sothebys International/Derek & Vee Photography)
Courtesy TTR Sothebys International/Derek & Vee Photography
The great room has 20-foot ceilings. There is a spiral staircase, a yoga studio, wine cellar and tasting room, movie theater, half basketball court, full-sized gym, pool and pool house, and an elevator to all levels.
(Courtesy TTR Sothebys International/Derek & Vee Photography)
Courtesy TTR Sothebys International/Derek & Vee Photography
The home was custom-built by Gibson Builders for Bret and Amy Baier in 2012.
(Courtesy TTR Sothebys International/Derek & Vee Photography)
Courtesy TTR Sothebys International/Derek & Vee Photography
The home also has a movie theater.
(Courtesy TTR Sothebys International/Derek & Vee Photography)
Courtesy TTR Sothebys International/Derek & Vee Photography
The home features a half basketball court.
(Courtesy TTR Sothebys International/Derek & Vee Photography)
Courtesy TTR Sothebys International/Derek & Vee Photography
An 11,000-square-foot, five-bedroom home originally custom-built for Fox News host Bret Baier and his wife Amy in Northwest D.C.’s exclusive Phillips Park neighborhood 14 years ago, has sold to D.C. restaurateur Ashok Bajaj for $7.1 million.
It’s one of the 10 most expensive home sales in D.C. this year.
Ჹ’s includes Bombay Club, Rasika and La Bise.
Baier was not the seller, though he does have another D.C. home on the market currently, which would be one of the highest priced residential transactions in D.C. history if it sells at its current price.
The seller of the Phillips Park home was a trust affiliated with investor and entrepreneur George D. Crowley Jr.
Even in Phillips Park, just off Foxhall Road, $7 million buys a lot of house. The great room has 20-foot ceilings. There is a spiral staircase, a yoga studio, wine cellar and tasting room, movie theater, half basketball court, full-sized gym, pool and pool house, and an elevator to all levels.
The home was listed by , who declined to identify the buyer, but noted the sale is significant.
“There is pent-up demand and very little inventory for luxury move-in ready, custom-built homes in Northwest D.C. The homes in Phillips Park in particular don’t trade very frequently, and many were built with the highest end finishes that were available when they were built roughly 10 years ago,” Crowley said.
and built by Gibson Builders for Bret and Amy Baier in 2012. The Baiers later sold the home when the couple built a sprawling estate on nearby Foxhall Road in Northwest D.C. in 2018. That home is currently on the market and . Baier and his family moved to Florida in 2023.
Editor’s Note: One of the properties owned by the Knightsbridge Restaurant Group was incorrectly stated. The group owns the Bombay Club restaurant.
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Jeff Clabaugh has spent 20 years covering the Washington region's economy and financial markets for 鶹 as part of a partnership with the Washington Business Journal, and officially joined the 鶹 newsroom staff in January 2016.