Serenity rooms, his-and-hers bathrooms and gated motor courts are among the luxurious features in this week’s most expensive home sales in metropolitan Phoenix.
$7,000,000
Dean Graziosi, real estate investor and New York Times best-selling author, purchased a 15,006-square-foot mansion in Paradise Valley’s Camelback Lands community. Graziosi is the founder of Dean Enterprises, LLC in Scottsdale, the production company for the television shows featuring his real estate information products.
The 2.24-acre estate has six bedrooms and 11 bathrooms with design features that include groined vault ceilings, wood-framed windows, Rio Lago honed marble flooring and custom wood moldings in every room.
The master suite features a serenity room and his-and-hers bathrooms. The home also includes a pool, spa and outdoor living room with fireplace and kitchen.
Daniel and Janet Rush sold the house.
$2,400,000
Shane C. Albers purchased a 7,030square-foot single-level mansion in Paradise Valley.
The five-bedroom, six-bathroom house has views of Mummy Mountain and includes a chef’s kitchen, theater room and a split master suite with his-and-hers bathrooms and closets.
The grounds of the estate include a pool, spa, outdoor fireplace, and a gated motor court with five garage bays. Charlene O. Davis, successor trustee of the CMC Living Trust, sold the house.
$2,225,000
David Hadden purchased this house in Phoenix’s La Donna Estates 2 community.
The single-level, 4,145-square-foot Arcadia house has four bedrooms, 3 1⁄2 bathrooms and features a custom-built
steel Dutch entryway door, and a fenced front patio with an open fireplace and sitting area.
The home has exposed wood beams, a kitchen with stone countertops, and a living room with sliding glass doors leading to a backyard with a pool. Libre Homes, LLC, an Arizona limited liability company, sold the house.
$2,200,000
Michael Beauchat purchased this mansion in Paradise Valley.
The 6,768-square-foot estate has six bedrooms, eight bathrooms and mountain views.
The Spanish-style house comes with exposed wood beams, stone and wood flooring, a home theater, temperaturecontrolled wine cellar, and grounds that include a guest house, pool, spa, fire pit and sport court.
John and Robin Grant, trustees of the JRG Living trust, sold the house.
$2,050,000
Michael W. Lovell paid cash through his trust for a 6,544-square-foot mansion in Phoenix.
The Mediterranean-style house sits on a 1.78-acre lot along the Phoenician Golf Course. The estate has views of Camelback Mountain and includes design accents such as travertine, granite, Venetian plaster, hickory, mesquite and custom ironwork.
Graziosi sold the house. He paid $1.6 million for it in 2011, according to real estate records.