A new listing in Highland Park has hit the market, and it ranks as the second-priciest property currently available for sale in Dallas.
The 23,000-square-foot two-story mansion boasts six bedrooms and 13 bathrooms. At $32.5 million, it is one of the most expensive listings in the City, second to only billionaire Toby Neugebauer’s $40 million “White House” mansion located near Preston Hollow.
The new listing at 4000 Euclid Avenue features a library, gym, office, five-car garage, wet bar, numerous staircases, elevator, and a dumbwaiter, a small freight lift meant to carry food between floors. On the main floor, the home welcomes guests with a 24-karat gold leaf-adorned domed grand foyer with vaulted ceilings.
Further in, a European imported marble fireplace and antique mirrors adorn the dining room.
The impressive property comes with a sunroom, a courtyard, a swimming pool, and an outdoor kitchen. The outside also features a fishpond fountain, an antique fireplace, and a loggia, a covered outdoor corridor exposed to the elements on one side.
The Highland Park mansion is asking roughly $1,400 per square foot at its current listing price. Under Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s, Jason Garcia manages the listing for Guinn Crousen, who has owned the home since 2003. Crousen is president of Arlington-based aluminum and titanium aerospace components, Progressive Incorporated.
Crousen made headlines in 2000 when he bagged the largest bighorn sheep ever during a two-week-long hunt that cost $200,000. The world record stood for around five years until a larger sheep was killed in a highway collision in Alberta in 2015.
While $32.5 million may be a steep asking price, it is nowhere near the top of potential home prices in the country.
Earlier this year, The Dallas Express recapped the most expensive house sales in the U.S. in 2024. At number one was an 8,000-square-foot Tuscan-style property along the Pacific Ocean just east of Santa Barbara. The elaborate estate ultimately sold for a whopping $96 million.