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Post by The Ultimate Nullifier on Oct 21, 2014 11:38:55 GMT -6
robot6.comicbookresources.com/2014/10/stan-lees-home-could-be-yours-for-a-cool-3-75-million/Stan Lee’s home could be yours for a cool $3.75 million Here’s the ultimate find for the truly devoted Marvel collector: Stan Lee’s house. According to the Los Angeles Times, the legendary comics creator has listed his walled and gated home in Hollywood Hills West for $3.75 million. It’s not quite Avengers Mansion, but the 1945 house does boast 2,500 square feet of living space, four bedrooms and six baths. There’s also a swimming pool and spa on the one-fifth-acre property, located on a cul-de-sac. A native New Yorker, the 91-year-old Lee moved to the West Coast in 1981 to help develop Marvel’s properties for film and television. He purchased this house in 2006 for $3.599 million.
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Post by The Ultimate Nullifier on Oct 23, 2014 18:17:03 GMT -6
robot6.comicbookresources.com/2014/10/stan-lee-isnt-selling-his-home-just-a-hunk-of-property/Stan Lee isn’t selling his home, ‘just a hunk of property’ At the risk of ROBOT 6 turning into Excelsior! Home Journal, there is another followup to the Stan Lee real-estate story: It turns out that $3.75 million listing in the Hollywood Hills isn’t for the creator’s home, but instead for another lot he owns. In fact, there’s no longer even a house on it. “I’m not selling my house. It’s just a piece of property we own,” Lee tells Los Angeles Magazine. “We tore it down, we were gonna rebuild and we decided to sell it instead, so it’s just a hunk of property that’s for sale.” Considering records indicate the 2,500-square-foot home was built in 1945 and hadn’t been remodeled since the mid-’70s, a desire to start from scratch is understandable. But judging from the description and single photo in the listing, it certainly used to be nice: a four-bedroom, six-bathroom house with a garage, swimming pool, spa and “lush gardens,” located at the end of a cul-de-sac. Now, however, it’s apparently just a vacant lot with a view of the city — but it can still be yours for $3.75 million.
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