The Rachofsky House hosted an annual fundraiser for AIDS research and the Dallas Museum of Art for 25 years. Photo: Kevin Tachman/amfAR/Getty Images
A Preston Hollow home that once housed expensive art pieces and hosted galas for the ultra-rich is for sale, Artnet reports.
Why it matters: The Rachofsky House is, by itself, a work of art.
It was designed in the 1990s by architect Richard Meier, who also designed L.A.'s Getty Center, Rome's Jubilee Church and Barcelona's Museum of Contemporary Art.
Fun fact: The three-story house is roughly 10,000 square feet — and only has one bedroom, per its website.
Howard and Cindy Rachofsky, who helped build Dallas' art scene, lived in the house for almost 30 years and hosted fundraisers there for the Dallas Museum of Art and the American Foundation for AIDS Research.
The couple plans to gift their art collection, which has hundreds of pieces, to the DMA after their death.
The intrigue: The house doesn't have a listing price. Howard Rachofsky tells Artnet the sale is a "logical estate planning decision" as he and his wife downsize.
"I won't sell it to someone who doesn't feel it's an important and significant property. I view it as an artwork. It's part of a community," he said.