One of Dallas’ most-expensive homes hit the market this week — a massive Italian-style mansion in Highland Park, asking $32.5 million.
The home, listed for the first time, is the second-most expensive listing in Dallas as neighborhoods like Highland Park and Preston Hollow bolster the city’s ultra-luxury supremacy among Texas metros.
The two-story mansion at 4000 Euclid Avenue includes six bedrooms and 13 bathrooms, a five car garage, library, office, gym, wet bar, dumbwaiter, elevator and multiple staircases. It spans 23,000 square feet on just over an acre, asking about $1,400 per square foot.
The main level features a grand foyer with vaulted ceilings and a dome decorated with 24-karat gold leaf.
The dining room includes a marble fireplace imported from Europe, cracked-burlap walls and wall niches backed with antique mirrors. There’s a sunroom and courtyard, with a fishpond fountain, swimming pool and outdoor kitchen and loggia, with another antique fireplace.
Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s agent Jason Garcia has the listing.

The seller is Guinn Crousen, president of Progressive Incorporated, a company in Arlington that manufactures aluminum and titanium aerospace components. Crousen held the world record for largest bighorn sheep ever killed — from a 2000 hunt that lasted two weeks and cost $200,000 — until a bigger one was killed in a highway collision in Alberta in 2015, D Magazine reported. He has owned the deed for the home since 2003.
A Dallas architect responsible for many large mansions sporting European flourishes throughout the city, Robbie Fusch of Fusch Architects, spent five years building the home and finished in 2015.
Fusch’s handiwork also includes Dallas’ most-expensive listing, billionaire Toby Neugebauer’s $40 million “White House” mansion near Preston Hollow. Built in 1996, it was previously the de facto headquarters for Neugebauer’s failed “anti-woke” fintech startup, GloriFi.
The spring rush is on for Dallas’ ultra-luxury home segment, and Crousen’s home is only the latest — a neoclassical estate in Preston Hollow, priced at $14.5 million, hit the market in late January, along with a 19,000-square-foot estate, also in Preston Hollow, listed for $23.5 million on Jan. 15.
Others have reappeared after striking out last fall: A Preston Hollow home on Hathway Street was relisted at $13.9 million, then increased to $14.9 million, after the listing was removed in August. Another home on Armstrong Parkway in Highland Park returned for almost $20 million after it was on the market only four days in October.
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