Zac Efron, the "High School Musical" star has reportedly sold his Hollywood Hills West home for $2.77 million. He had listed it for $2.87 million in March this year.
Efron purchased the home in 2008 for $2.35 million.
The residence is a mid-century modern home spanning an area of 2,424 square feet. The single-family residence has two bedrooms and two full and one half bathroom. Interiors of the residence feature floor-to-ceiling glass windows and slider doors, an open floor plan, mixed ceilings and hardwood flooring.
Living spaces include a large drawing room, a gourmet kitchen with a breakfast bar and a sitting area. Outside, the home has a swimming pool, ample recreation area and a spacious parking garage.
Talking to Contact Music about why he was selling the home, Efron earlier said:
"That house was sort of in the middle of everything. It spit you out on one end on Sunset and on the other end onto Ventura Boulevard. It was a great idea initially - concrete floors, metal windows - a great bachelor pad, in my opinion. But it was surrounded by windows, and at night people started coming up and tapping on the glass while I was asleep. It started to get a little bit strange."
The listing comes in the wake of Efron's purchase of a Los Feliz home for $3.9 million. That residence is a five-bedroom home snugly enclosed in a gated, private lot. It features modern architecture with hardwood flooring, floor-to-ceiling windows and doors that offer panoramic views of the city and its skyline. The two-story residence has large spacious rooms and custom-built cabinetry as well.
There is also the fountain where Efron reportedly fell and broke his jaw.
The "Seventeen Again" actor visited rehab two different times this year for alcohol and cocaine addiction, respectively. However, he is all clean now and has been focusing on work.
Efron's movie "Neighbors" just released. The Seth Rogan-starring film has been garnering good reviews. Scott Mendelson wrote in his review for Forbes:
"Neighbors is a rock-solid comedy. It has a genuinely interesting premise and tells its story with just enough smarts and humanity to make the vulgarity and bawdy humor stick. The film is actually about something worthwhile, yet (for better or worse) doesn't let its themes overtake the comedy. It operates as a genuinely funny, but not obnoxiously course, mediation on the bumpy and uncertain transition to adulthood. Neighbors just simply works."