Taken from the Northern Virginia Association of Realtors® RE+View Magazine (SeptOct2020 issue)
Gus, continued to build homes as separate businesses. Dean worked at the Yeonas Company for years, even after the family sold it. In 2002, he created his own boutique brokerage with his business partner, Jack Shafran. The Yeonas Company built between 13,000 to 14,000 homes in Northern Virginia. With roots that run deep throughout the community, the family still gets calls today from clients who bought their homes in the 50s and 60s from the original Yeonas Company.
L to R. Standing: Stephen G. Yeonas, Paul G. Yeonas. Seated Front Row - Gus C. Yeonas, George C. Yeonas (know as “The Chief”), Jimmie G. Yeonas.
Centennial Series: The Yeonas Family Four Generations of Real Estate Personal Success Icon By Kate O’Toole The story began in the early 1950s. NVAR had existed for three decades, and homes were selling for under $15,000. The American Dream was alive and well in an optimistic post-World War II era. Times were simpler, as evidenced by the length of real estate contracts: one page. Stephen Yeonas Sr., one of four brothers, had just returned from war and established the Yeonas Company in Arlington, Virginia. His brothers joined the family business shortly thereafter. Today, the Yeonas real estate tradition stretches four generations long—marked most recently with Dimitri and Paul Yeonas joining their father, Dean Yeonas, at
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TYSONS PREMIER v Winter 2020
“I have hanging on my wall an advertising piece of 1955 when my dad was building homes in Vienna woods,” Dean said. “Houses started at $12,990, and we are reselling those same houses at $600,000 to $700,000 today. … I’m actually tearing down houses that my dad built in the 50s, building new homes on them and reselling those homes. So that’s quite a perspective to have!” According to Dean, past clients often remark on the care and level of service his father and uncles provided, and professionalism was a top priority to each of them. “They went out of their way to treat people properly—the way they wanted to be treated. I think it was to do with their heritage, their background and where they grew up,” Dean said. “And it was being part of the association: to raise the bar and have ethical and educational standards.”
Dean met his business partner, Jack Shafran, in high school. Coincidentally, Jack’s father was also a past president of NVAR. his brokerage in 2019. Today, their business—Yeonas and Shafran—comprisStephen Yeonas Sr. is es 10 agents, and the newDean’s uncle. est agents are Dean’s sons, “As a kid, high school Dimitri and Paul Yeonas, and college, I would and Jack’s son, Jonathan literally dig ditchShafran. The company also es outside and then works closely with Dean’s graduated to develop cousin, Stephen Yeonas Jr., entire communities…,” Yeonas-advertisement-a star is born who owns a homebuilding Dean said. “Our family company, Artisan Builders, has been doing it for in McLean, Virginia. 70 years, and now my two sons work with “When someone says, ‘thank you for what us!” you’ve provided for our family,’ that’s what Stephen Yeonas Sr. became president of makes it worthwhile,” Dean said. “I teach my NVAR in 1957 and sold his company in the continued on page 74 early 1970s, although he and his brother, VIVARESTON.COM