The Last House of Tupac Hits the LA Market


Rapper and performing artist Tupac Shakur’s last house, an almost 6,000-square-foot manor in a territory of Woodland Hills close to the Calabasas fringe, is available for $2.659 million, reports TMZ.

Shakur lived in the house from 1995 up to the season of his 1996 murder in Las Vegas. In spite of the fact that the house was rented for him by his mark at the time, Death Row Records, the Los Angeles Times detailed in 2000 that Shakur was retained to purchase the house at the season of his passing.

A 1997 Vanity Fair profile of the craftsman noticed that the home, in which Shakur lived with his life partner Kidada Jones (girl of music powerhouse Quincy Jones) was constantly loaded with going by individuals from Shakur’s more distant family and “any companion who required a bed.”

Outside the house, verses to Shakur’s melody “Made Ni**az”— the last tune he made an official video for before his passing—are as yet cut into the solid: “Let no man isolate what we make.”

The six-room house has unmistakably been refreshed since the late 1990s, politeness of the present proprietor and at a cost of about $1 million, says TMZ. (Posting operator Mark Hermann says the house has changed hands twice since Tupac was an occupant.)

The posting touts a list of extravagant conveniences, from an immense stainless steel stove to an ace suite with its own particular living room and a jacuzzi tub.

The lawn includes a roomy, green yard, a pool, and an open air porch with chimney and barbecue range. It’s recorded for $2.659 million.


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