The London home where singer Amy Winehouse lived and died has been put up for sale by her family for £2.7 million ($4.2 million).
The three-bedroom property in the Camden neighborhood of northwest London had become a shrine of sorts for mourning fans who left flowers and tributes following Winehouse's death last July from alcohol poisoning.
Thousands of mourning fans flocked to the property and transformed the square where it sits into a shrine following the singer's death last July.
Ten months later her relatives are placing the house on the market, saying it would be inappropriate for any of them to move in.
"It was not practical to keep it empty while paying the costs of its upkeep," Chris Goodman, a spokesman for the Winehouse family, said in a statement, adding that the family had reached the decision with "great regret."
The 2,500 square-foot home features three bedrooms - including an "impressive master suite with vaulted ceiling" - three living rooms and private front and rear gardens overlooking the tony Camden Square, according to online listing agent Housenetwork.co.uk.
There had been rumours that the villa in Camden Square, north-west London, could be turned into the headquarters for the Amy Winehouse Foundation, a charity set up to support causes close to the singer's heart.
The singer rose to fame with her 2006 album "Back to Black," but she struggled for years with drug and alcohol abuse.
The 27-year-old soul diva was found dead in bed July 23 at her London home from accidental alcohol poisoning.