Floyd Mayweather Jr. Lists Miami Condo for $2.59 Million

Floyd Mayweather Jr., the famous boxing champion, is selling his penthouse condo in the St. Tropez Condominiums building in Miami, Fla., for $2.59 million.

Gossip Extra broke news of the deal stating that Mayweather was selling his Miami pied-a-Terre because he was looking for a single-family home in the area. He is apparently had enough of the condo-life.

"He wants to leave condo life for a house. His four children are getting older, they are now 12 to 15 years old, so he wants them to be able to run around," Tanasha Pettigrew, the agent representing the home, told the website.

According to the listing records, the condo is a 3,020-square-feet penthouse apartment comprising of four bedrooms and four and a half bathrooms.

Interiors of the home are clad in white with tiled flooring, glass floor-to-ceiling windows and slider doors and an open floor plan.

There is a formal living and dining area and an open plan modern kitchen with a breakfast bar. While all the rooms in the condo offer water views, the study faces the ocean exuding a serene environment. The master suite has walk-in closets and a clawfoot tub in the bathroom.

The listing doesn't say much about the residence, but describes it in just three sentences.

"Luxury Penthouse in Saint Tropez condominium. Immaculate and professionally designed. A true home in the sky."

The building amenities include a barbecue area, a two-car parking area (exclusive for the penthouse), a clubhouse, a gym, pool and lounging area, a library and a boat dock as well.

Check out the photos of the home here.

Floyd Mayweather raked in about $105 million in earnings in 2014, which bolstered him to the top of Forbes list of highest earning celebrities. In a recent interview with TMZ the boxer said he was going to get his girlfriend a private jet for her birthday this time. That would be $56 million and upwards!

No big deal!

The five-division world champion has won ten world titles and is undefeated till date. But even great athletes like Money have their doubts before going into the rink.

"I wake up at 3 am and run eight miles. There are voices going through my head telling me 'He can beat you and you don't deserve to be there.' But then there is another voice in my head where my mother's telling me, 'You are special. You are where you're at for a reason.' Those are the things no one understands. So I want to continue to push myself to the limit," Mayweather told the Associated France Press.

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