Property Highlights
Property Details
Price: $525,000
2 Bed
1 Bath
Year Built: 1912
Price: $525,000
2 Bed
1 Bath
Year Built: 1912
Built in 1912, this two-bedroom, one-bath row house on Warren Street NE represents one of the more enduring residential forms in Washington. The home sits in the Brookland corridor of NE, a neighborhood defined by tree-lined streets, independent retail, and straightforward access to the Red Line Metro. Original construction details typical of the era give the home structural character that newer construction rarely replicates. At 525,000 dollars, the home enters the market as a well-positioned NE DC address.
The row house at 258 Warren Street NE was built in 1912, placing it among the early residential development that shaped the NE quadrant of Washington. The home carries the architectural language of its era: a brick facade, a defined street presence, and the proportions that characterize DC row house construction from that period.
Warren Street sits within the Brookland corridor, one of NE’s most established residential areas. The neighborhood offers walkable access to local dining, coffee, and retail, with the Red Line Metro providing direct connections to downtown DC and beyond.
The two-bedroom, one-bath configuration is a practical and versatile layout for a row house of this vintage. The home’s scale and form are consistent with the surrounding streetscape, and the 1912 construction date signals the kind of material quality and craftsmanship that defines DC’s older residential stock.
At 525,000 dollars, this Warren Street row house represents a direct entry into one of NE Washington’s most recognizable and well-connected neighborhoods. The Wardman Residential team at Compass represented the buyer in this transaction.
Neighborhood & Lifestyle
A snapshot of everyday conveniences, destinations and experiences just moments from your door.
Neighborhood & Lifestyle
A snapshot of everyday conveniences, destinations and experiences just moments from your door.
Property Location
The row house at 258 Warren Street NE was constructed in 1912, making it part of the early residential fabric of the NE quadrant. The two-bedroom, one-bath layout is a straightforward and functional configuration for a home of this type and era. DC row houses from this period were built with brick construction and proportions that have proven durable across more than a century of use.
Brookland is one of NE Washington’s most established neighborhoods, with a residential character shaped by decades of owner-occupied row houses and a walkable commercial corridor along 12th Street NE. The area sits close to the Brookland-CUA Metro station on the Red Line, offering direct service to Union Station and downtown. Local dining, coffee shops, and neighborhood retail are accessible on foot from Warren Street.
Day-to-day life on Warren Street NE is oriented around walkability and transit. The Red Line Metro is a short walk away, connecting this address to the broader DC Metro system with ease. The surrounding blocks offer the kind of settled, residential street presence that defines Brookland, with tree canopy, consistent row house architecture, and neighborhood-scale amenities within reach.
A Wardman team member and the Wardman Residential team at Compass have worked extensively with buyers and sellers across NE Washington, including the Brookland corridor and its surrounding neighborhoods. Our experience with DC row houses spans properties from Capitol Hill to the I-295 corridor, giving us a grounded perspective on how homes like this one are priced and positioned in the current market. If you are considering a row house in Brookland or elsewhere in NE DC, reach out — we are glad to share recent comparables and our view of the submarket.
Key details about the residence, building, and location to help you evaluate this opportunity.
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1010 Massachusetts Ave NW #306, Washington, DC 20001