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    $100 Million House

    Inside the most expensive home in Dallas (price tag: $100 million)

    Candy Evans
    Mar 22, 2015 | 4:04 pm

    Back in January 2013, Tom and Cinda Hicks got a lot of national attention when they enlisted Doug Newby to sell their 25-acre Crespi Estate (so named for its original owners, Italian Count Pio Crespi and his wife, Florence) in Preston Hollow for $135 million. But all that buzz didn’t attract a buyer.

    Now Realtor Allie Beth Allman, a friend of the Hicks family, has the listing. Newby never put it in MLS, but Allman sure did, and this time the price tag is $100 million — still the most expensive in Dallas and one of the priciest in the nation.

    Allman, also the listing agent on the historic Trammell Crow home, sold the estate to the couple back in 1997, before they began a massive multimillion-dollar renovation and expansion on one of the city’s most historical properties. The work took nearly three years and as many as 250 designers, builders and artisans to complete.

    Secluded in the city
    Recently I took a tour of the 28,000-plus-square-foot main house, as well as the 3,347-square-foot guest house and 4,836-square-foot recreation building, which is now being marketed as Walnut Place. The approach to the private gates of 10000 Hollow Way Rd. feels more like a drive through the French countryside to a fabulous chateau deep in the heart of the forest. It’s hard to believe this is just seconds from the Dallas North Tollway and less than 10 minutes from downtown.

    It’s hard to believe this is just seconds from the Dallas North Tollway and less than 10 minutes from downtown.

    The estate overlooks a forest of trees and a creek that runs through the property. There are meadows, trails, pond, rose and vegetable gardens, greenhouse, two courtyards lined with 16 magnolia trees each and tennis court. A helipad with a lighted landing pad is covered with grass when not in use to maintain the natural aesthetic. A 1,500-foot-deep well supplies the estate grounds with purified water.

    You enter the original Crespi estate, built in 1938 and designed by Maurice Fatio, through an ornamental steel front door. The addition — completed by Dallas builder John Sebastian under the guidance of noted New York architect Peter Marino — flows seamlessly. I’m told the Hickses didn’t just add more limestone to the exterior renovation — they went to the quarry in Indiana that supplied the original limestone back in the 1930s. A light sandblasting helped match the new to the existing.

    Inside the main house
    The formal dining room is generously sized, but not overly so, with oak chevron-patterned floors in a dark finish, which were imported from France. High-gloss lacquered walls have ornamental plaster accents.

    The kitchen is surprisingly cozy for a home of this magnitude. It has antique terra cotta floors, European tiled backsplash, flawless cabinetry with glazed finish and commercial-grade appliances — including four ovens and a 10-foot La Cornue range that runs about $65,000.

    Adjacent to the kitchen are the breakfast room and butlery. A nearby conservatory has limestone fireplace mantels and heated marble floors. A warm and beckoning family room has dark, wide-planked wood floors and concealed doors. The library, half of which was in the original estate, boasts paneling dating back to the 1820s. An original parlor was taken down to the studs and turned into a private office with double televisions built in.

    The new living room is very spacious; it’s where the Hickses hosted an event for former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani years ago, when he considered a run for the White House. The room overlooks a wooded courtyard with an elegant fountain.

    The crown jewel of the second floor is the 3,000-square-foot master wing with separate his-and-hers bathrooms and dressing rooms.

    The crown jewel of the second floor is the 3,000-square-foot master wing with entry vestibule and the Crespi Estate ribbon design on the doors. It has an antique fireplace surrounded by slate, as well as separate his-and-hers bathrooms and dressing rooms.

    Her dressing room has mercury glass panels and pleated fabric closet doors to protect clothing, plus a personal study with an antique marble fireplace. His “spogliatoio” boasts hand-waxed Honduran mahogany paneling. The master suite also has a sitting area and a terrace.

    There are more bedrooms and bathrooms on the second floor, plus a laundry room. Up one more level are more bedrooms, exercise room, trophy room and three terraces.

    The basement level contains several maintenance and storage rooms that run below the house and motor court, as well as a movie theater (not to be confused with the nearly full-sized theater in the recreation building) and a 500-bottle wine room kept at a constant 55 degrees. There are a total of eight spaces in two garages.

    Elsewhere on the property
    The recreational building is one of several ancillary buildings on the grounds. It has a 24-by-47 great room and commercial-grade kitchen. Because this complex is where the country club-sized pool and spa are located, there are both men’s and women’s changing rooms with lockers and showers.

    The 19-seat theater has a reel projection room and concession counter for candy and popcorn. Framed jerseys hang on the walls, a reminder of when Hicks owned the Texas Rangers, Dallas Stars, Mesquite Championship Rodeo and the Liverpool F.C.

    The two-bathroom guesthouse could also serve as a “business house.” It has a living room, formal dining room, office and full kitchen. Two full baths on the second story feature rare granites and marbles.

    I asked Allman and her associate, David Nichols, the two things we all want to know: Is any of the artwork for sale, and where are the Hicks planning to go?

    The art is definitely not for sale, I’m told.

    “The Hicks children are grown and have their own homes,” Allman says. “They also spend time at their home in La Jolla but will always maintain a residence in Dallas.”

    ---

    A version of this story originally was published on Candy’s Dirt.

    Her sitting area in the master suite.

    10000 Hollow Way her master sitting area
    Photo courtesy of Allie Beth Allman & Associates
    Her sitting area in the master suite.
    home-for-sale
    news/real-estate
    news/home-design

    Where to live

    These Dallas suburbs offer best value and affordability for homebuyers

    Amber Heckler
    Sep 11, 2025 | 4:13 pm
    Melissa, Texas
    cityofmelissa.com/
    Melissa was dubbed the No. 1 best suburb to live in Dallas-Fort Worth.

    Finding the right place to live in such a densely populated metro as Dallas-Fort Worth may be intimidating, but certainly not impossible. And a new housing affordability report has revealed suburbs like Melissa, Celina, and Princeton have topped the list of Dallas-area neighbors that offer the best value (and affordable housing prices) for homebuyers.

    Online real estate marketplace Zoocasa compared 42 Dallas-Fort Worth suburbs across these four metrics to determine the best places to live: Average single-family home prices, median income, walkability score, and population change from July 2023 to July 2024.

    Overall, Zoocasa's report found the best suburbs to live aren't popular cities like Southlake or Flower Mound (the latter didn't even make the list). Instead, the top three best DFW suburbs are in neighboring Collin County, northeast of Dallas, which stand out because residents "earn relatively high incomes while home prices remain comparatively affordable."

    The far-flung suburb Melissa topped the list with a median household income of $137,875, which the report says is "more than enough" to afford the average price of a home in the area, which adds up to $476,813. The city is situated 40 miles from downtown Dallas, or a 50-minute drive (depending on traffic).

    Naturally, there's more to love about this suburb than just its housing prices and its residents' comfortable income. According to the city website, Melissa provides "a small town feel and strong sense of community" that's not too far away from larger cities like McKinney (which ranked as the 15th best Dallas-Fort Worth suburb).

    "While remembering and honoring our past, embracing small-town charm and sensibilities, we have positioned ourselves for quality and managed growth in the years to come," the site says.

    Melissa is definitely positioned to accommodate future population growth, especially with its recent string of grocery store openings. Kroger chose Melissa for its first North Texas supermarket since 2019, which finally opened last October, and Texas cult-favorite grocery chain H-E-B followed suit with its own Melissa store debut in May 2025.

    Celina, which is less than 20 miles west from Melissa, scored the No. 2 spot thanks to its relatively high median household income of $155,875. But with a higher median income also comes a higher average home price, the report says.

    "With that income, a buyer could afford a home priced up to $719,282 (assuming a 30-year fixed mortgage at 6.5 percent and a 20 percent down payment)," the report's author wrote. "That figure is well above Celina’s average home price of $536,374."

    Earlier this year, this affluent suburb turned heads when it was dubbed the U.S. city with the second-highest population growth rate over the last decade. Celina's population skyrocketed an astonishing 314 percent from from 2014-2023.

    Princeton, the fastest-growing city nationwide in 2024, ranked No. 3 on the list with average home prices coming out to $316,983 and a median household income of $96,766.

    Princeton's population has more than doubled in the last five years, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Located 13 miles southeast of Melissa and 42 miles northeast from downtown Dallas, the city boasts a population of just over 37,000 residents.

    "While its 10-year home price growth has been a more modest 88.7 percent, prices are likely to rise more rapidly going forward," the report said. "As new residents arrive, additional services and infrastructure will follow to keep up with demand, further boosting Princeton’s desirability."

    The top 10 best suburbs to live in Dallas-Fort Worth are:

    • No. 1 – Melissa
    • No. 2 – Celina
    • No. 3 – Princeton
    • No. 4 – Cedar Hill
    • No. 5 – Weatherford
    • No. 6 – Grand Prairie
    • No. 7 – Sachse
    • No. 8 – Anna
    • No. 9 – Garland
    • No. 10 – Mesquite
    celinacollin countydallasdallas suburbshousing affordabilityhousing marketmelissapopulation growthprincetonreal estatesuburbs
    news/real-estate
    news/home-design

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