Someone finally bought the Crespi Estate, according to The Dallas Morning News. The 27,000-square-foot estate on Walnut Hill Lane has been purchased by a trust of Dallas’ Cox family.

The mansion was owned by developer Mehrdad Moayedi since 2017.

The estate, which was last listed for sale at $38 million, sold to representatives of the Charlee Lochridge Cox Dynasty Trust, according to Steve Brown, real estate editor at The Dallas Morning News. The trust was founded by Dallas’ prominent Edwin L. Cox family.

Edwin L. Cox Sr. is a primary benefactor of Southern Methodist University’s Cox School of Business, Brown reports. His son, Edwin L. Cox Jr., is a well-known Dallas investor and financier. Edwin Cox Sr.’s grandson, Bradley Cox, is the chairman of Cox Oil Co. and lives in the Uptown area. One of the Crespi Estate’s buyer’s trust representatives is an officer at Brad Cox’s family oil company.

The Crespi has a storied history. It was built by an Italian count. Moayedi bought the original estate and divided the land into a seven-home neighborhood called The Crespi Estates. “When you think of Dallas stereotypes, there’s football, big hair and large living in large houses, and there’s none larger than the Crespi,” says Mark Lamster, architecture critic at The Dallas Morning News. “This is the definition of what a Dallas mansion could be: an exercise in the kind of ostentation that makes Dallas, Dallas.”

Crespi Estate