Duxbury home sells for $8.25M, highest sale for town in 20 years
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Duxbury home sells for $8.25M, highest sale for town in 20 years
"In a landmark deal for the South Shore luxury real estate market, 21 River Lane in Duxbury has sold for $8,250,000 - the second-highest residential sale in the town over the last 20 years and the highest since 2019, according to MLS data. Listed by Beth Dickerson of Gibson Sotheby's International Realty in March, the custom-built waterfront estate represents a rare example of new construction breaking into the upper echelon of Duxbury's historically tight luxury market, Dickerson told Boston.com in an interview."
""This is the first new construction home on the water that has sold, and has broken records because of the fact that someone doesn't have to go in there and tear it apart," she said. Designed by Maribeth Brostowski of Virian Studios, built by Payne Bouchier in 2012, and with architectural design by Julia Chuslo, the home spans 14 rooms, including six bedrooms, six full bathrooms, and three half baths, all set on nearly two acres of prime coastal land."
""In Duxbury, there's been no new builds that have sold in the luxury market," Dickerson said. "The older homes, you could find one for $6 to $7 million, they're on the ocean, and they had some land, but somebody had to go in and put in $3 to $4 million [in renovations] afte"
The waterfront estate at 21 River Lane in Duxbury sold for $8,250,000, the second-highest residential sale in town in 20 years and the highest since 2019. The custom-built property, listed by Beth Dickerson of Gibson Sotheby's International Realty, spans 14 rooms with six bedrooms, six full bathrooms, and three half baths on nearly two acres of coastal land. Designed by Maribeth Brostowski of Virian Studios, built by Payne Bouchier in 2012, and architecturally shaped by Julia Chuslo, the shingle-style home features a geothermal well and a Nantucket-inspired "family compound" aesthetic. The sale signals new-construction entry into Duxbury's high-end market, contrasting older oceanfront homes that often require multi-million-dollar renovations.
Read at Boston.com
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