The stunning home that Cameron Frye called home in the 1986 classic "Ferris Bueller's Day Off" is back on the market -- at a discounted price.
Per the Chicago Tribune, the incredible Ben Rose home located at 370 Beech St. in Highland Park was back on the market with a $1.5 million asking price with Coldwell Banker on Monday.
That price is $150,000 less than the $1.65 million asking price the property had when it was last listed in 2011. According to Curbed Chicago, it was listed as high as $2.3 million in 2009.
Built in 1953, the steel-and-glass home was designed by architects A. James Speyer and David Haid and comes with four bedrooms and four bathrooms, wall-to-ceiling windows and room to park four cars -- including a red Ferrari, should one be so inclined. The home is surrounded by trees and offers 5,300 square feet of living space throughout.
The new listing only offers one exterior pic, but...
Per the Chicago Tribune, the incredible Ben Rose home located at 370 Beech St. in Highland Park was back on the market with a $1.5 million asking price with Coldwell Banker on Monday.
That price is $150,000 less than the $1.65 million asking price the property had when it was last listed in 2011. According to Curbed Chicago, it was listed as high as $2.3 million in 2009.
Built in 1953, the steel-and-glass home was designed by architects A. James Speyer and David Haid and comes with four bedrooms and four bathrooms, wall-to-ceiling windows and room to park four cars -- including a red Ferrari, should one be so inclined. The home is surrounded by trees and offers 5,300 square feet of living space throughout.
The new listing only offers one exterior pic, but...
- 8/6/2013
- by Joseph Erbentraut
- Huffington Post
That’s right! You can own a piece of American film history by purchasing the iconic (and crash-prone) home of Cameron Frye from Ferris Bueller’s Day Off. Well, that is if you have $1.65 million handy.
According to Curbed, (via Gawker) the house was “designed by architects A. James Speyer and David Haid in 1953, the cantilevered steel-and-glass property offers 5,300 square feet of living space and floor-to-ceiling windows throughout.
Oh yeah.
What movie home would you most like to live in?
You can e-mail Kristy, follow her on Twitter or check out her production blog.
According to Curbed, (via Gawker) the house was “designed by architects A. James Speyer and David Haid in 1953, the cantilevered steel-and-glass property offers 5,300 square feet of living space and floor-to-ceiling windows throughout.
Oh yeah.
What movie home would you most like to live in?
You can e-mail Kristy, follow her on Twitter or check out her production blog.
- 1/5/2011
- by Kristy Puchko
- The Film Stage
My friend Eric sent this real estate over to me with the caution, "It's being sold 'as-is.'" Some of you will recognize it from the photo below, but here's a hint: It's not Keanu's and Sandra's Lake House.
Yep, the Ferris Bueller house - or more specifically the Cameron Frye house from Ferris Bueller's Day Off - is on the market, at what I think is a fairly reasonable $2.3 million. Reasonable? At over two million? Well, yes, actually. For starters, it's 5,300 square feet in Highland Park, Illinois, so we're not exactly talking about some studio apartment on the south side.
But it's also a rather impressive piece of architecture:
"The Ben Rose Home-site of the famous movie Ferris Bueller's Day Off, cantilevered over the ravine, these two steel and glass buildings, which can never be duplicated, have incredible vistas of the surrounding woods. This is a unique property designed by A.
Yep, the Ferris Bueller house - or more specifically the Cameron Frye house from Ferris Bueller's Day Off - is on the market, at what I think is a fairly reasonable $2.3 million. Reasonable? At over two million? Well, yes, actually. For starters, it's 5,300 square feet in Highland Park, Illinois, so we're not exactly talking about some studio apartment on the south side.
But it's also a rather impressive piece of architecture:
"The Ben Rose Home-site of the famous movie Ferris Bueller's Day Off, cantilevered over the ravine, these two steel and glass buildings, which can never be duplicated, have incredible vistas of the surrounding woods. This is a unique property designed by A.
- 5/26/2009
- by Colin Boyd
- GetTheBigPicture.net
Fancy grabbing a piece of 80s movie nostalgia that goes above and beyond novelty desk toys and retro T-shirts? Well, we’ve got the ultimate treat for cinephiles with deep pockets – the house as seen in classic John Hughes comedy Ferris Bueller’s Day Off. Yours for a cool $2.3 million, this 5,300-square-foot property in the Highland Park area of Chicago, Illinois is recognisable as the onscreen home to Ferris’s (Matthew Broderick) downbeat buddy Cameron Frye (Alan Ruck) and is best remembered for the sad demise of the Ferrari 250Gt California Spyder belonging to Cameron’s dad that goes hurling out of the distinctive glass wall (though as is famously known, a kit car was used for the stunt).
The home was designed by top architects A. James Speyer and David Haid and is a complete one-off, described in the listing as “an amazing architectural treasure”. Making it so special...
The home was designed by top architects A. James Speyer and David Haid and is a complete one-off, described in the listing as “an amazing architectural treasure”. Making it so special...
- 5/26/2009
- Boxwish.com
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