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The boxing champion lived in the single-story space in Louisville, Kentucky, which has a museum in recent years. It is for sale, along with two neighboring properties, for $1. 5 million.
By Johnny Diaz
The childhood home where Muhammad Ali, the three-time world heavyweight boxing champion and activist, learned to box and that was along the route of his funeral procession in Louisville, Ky., is for sale.
On Tuesday, the one-story pink house, which for several years was a museum of sorts, focused on Ali’s formative years and humanitarian activities, and two of his neighboring homes were put up for sale through Christie’s International Real Estate Bluegrass for $1. 5 million, according to the company’s share price.
“The house of ‘The Greatest,'” the directory says, noting that the one-story ranch-style home at 3302 Grand Avenue in the city’s Parkland community features two bedrooms. The habitable domain of the 3 homes combined is 3,363 feet.
Rusty Underwood, one of the agents, described the assets as “a rare offering. “
“Muhammad Ali spent most of his formative years and adult life on the property,” he said Tuesday.
George Bochetto, a Philadelphia litigator who said he owned the home with his losing partner’s widow, bought it in 2016 for $60,000.
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