Fast X star Tyrese Gibson is happy with his girlfriend in a luxurious villa that he used all his assets to buy
The Woodland Hills, Calif., compound that Atlanta-based singer and actor Tyrese Gibson has listed at a tetch under $2.9 miℓℓio𝚗, more than twice the $1.385 miℓℓio𝚗 he paid shortly after it was built 11 years ago, is an unremarkable, tan-colored Mediterranean-ish house that almost no one passing by would notice or look at twice.
According to online estimates, the “Sweet Lady” and “How You Gonna Act Like That” singer has published six albums and sold 3.7 miℓℓio𝚗 copies since the late 1990s. He gained more success in five “Fast & Furious” and three “Transformers” movie. He will star in the “Spider-Man” spinoff “Morbius” opposite Jared Leto and two more “Fast & Furious” films. He’s going from singer to actor.
Gibson’s not-quite-half-acre parcel, first spotted on Zillow Gone Wild and available through “Selling Sunset” star Jason Oppenheim of The Oppenheim Group, has four structures, including the main house, which has five bedroom suites, including a primary suite with two walk-in closets and a terrace, and 5.5 bathrooms.
While the huge double-height combination entrance and living room with its even grander curved staircase and curlicued wrought-iron railings is lavish, much of the main home is a normal upmarket suburban affair that can comfortably house a large family.
The large living area contains a baby grand piano, white slipcovered furniture, and a black fireplace.
The home theater contains brown microsuede chairs and a huge, high-end kitchen that extends to a dining area and family room.
Most bathrooms, including the master, have medium-brown wood cabinetry and beige tiles. The house’s back is another carnival.
A large yellow Transformer governs a fire pit with a circular built-in bench and patriotic red, white, and blue cushions. (Gibson’s Atlanta mansion has a similar monument.)
An Asian-inspired poolside pavilion contains an outdoor kitchen, built-in grilling station and bar with cherry-red worktops, a half-bath, and a full Benihana-style Teppanyaki setup behind shoji screens.
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