Photo courtesy of Compass real estate.

A house that once hosted hundreds of ragers can now be a quiet single-family residence replete with koi and turtles. Compass Real Estate Agency has listed a Dupont Circle house that Airbnb renters often used to host lavish, disruptive parties.

Since April 2014, D.C. Police were called to the house more than 100 times, according to Washingtonian. And last May, D.C. Attorney General Karl Racine sued owner Doug Jefferies for using the space as a public hall, boarding house, and bed and breakfast without the proper licenses.

Formerly known on Airbnb as the “Celebrity House Hunter Mansion,” Jefferies (who is also the founder of Results Gym) rented the house for $1,200 a night. Jefferies told Washingtonian that he used the proceeds to fund an international relief organization that he founded. He also said that while he had strict guidelines on how the property could be used, some renters violated his terms.

Currently, the house is listed to buyers for $4.5 million. According to Compass, the 5,220-square-foot property has five bedrooms, five bathrooms, a private roof deck, a heated pool, an interior elevator, a private terrace, and an outdoor shower, among other amenities. Not to mention,”brick, glass and tile greet visitors in the inviting 18’ tall entry way, where koi and turtles play underfoot and a wall of cascading water stirs the senses.”

At 2220 Q Street NW, the house is “nestled in a private alcove between Rock Creek Park, Kalorama, and Dupont, according to the listing, which was first reported by Curbed.