Vlade Divac, the former NBA player has reportedly put his Pacific Palisades home up for sale with a $3.25 million price tag.
The Realtor Blog reports that the former Los Angeles Lakers center offered the home as a rental for $13,000 a month two years back. It was also offered for sale briefly in 2013 for the same asking price.
However, the residence has now hit the sale block for a lump sum. If the residence sells for the asking price, Divac will make a $1 million profit on his purchase price of $2.5 million.
According to the listing records, the house is a 4384-square-foot single-family home. The three-story house has five bedroom and four bathrooms.
Interiors of the residence feature drywall and wood-beamed glass ceilings in a certain section of the home. The contemporary pad also has complete hardwood flooring throughout and large floor-to-ceiling glass windows and slider doors.
Living spaces of the residence include an office, a family room, a yoga room, a master suite fit with walk-in closets and a wine cellar. Several balconies offer panoramic views of the area's skyline.
Outside, the home has an exterior dining area, two parking garages that easily accommodate six cars and sitting areas.
The listing describes the home a, "Gated Estate featuring panoramic ocean and majestic mountain views in the beautiful Castellammare neighborhood."
Check out photos of the home, here. Divac has played eight successful seasons in the NBA. He is one of the first NBA basketball players to have trained outside the United States. He now heads the Serbian Olympic Committee.
"I love the passion he played the game with, and it looked easy, too, the way he played. I love the way he could catch the ball and push it up the break. Not a lot of centers do that. He just played the game the right way, and he played it to win. I respect that. He never got that chip [NBA championship], but he came so close so many times and I was really pulling for him," Joakim Noah, power forward of the Chicago Bulls told GQ magazine about Divac, adding that the veteran player was his idol.