Current:Home > FinanceMuhammad Ali’s childhood home is for sale in Kentucky after being converted into a museum -Zenith Investment School
Muhammad Ali’s childhood home is for sale in Kentucky after being converted into a museum
Oliver James Montgomery View
Date:2025-04-07 14:33:32
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — The pink house where Muhammad Ali grew up dreaming of boxing fame — and where hundreds of fans gathered for an emotional send-off as his funeral procession passed by decades later — is up for sale.
The two-bedroom, one-bathroom house in Louisville was converted into a museum that offered a glimpse into the formative years of the boxing champion and humanitarian known worldwide as The Greatest. The house went on the market Tuesday along with two neighboring homes — one was turned into a welcome center-gift shop and the other was meant to become a short-term rental.
The owners are asking $1.5 million for the three properties. Finding a buyer willing to maintain Ali’s childhood home as a museum would be “the best possible result,” co-owner George Bochetto said.
“This is a part of Americana,” said Bochetto, a Philadelphia attorney and former Pennsylvania state boxing commissioner. “This is part of our history. And it needs to be treated and respected as such.”
The museum opened for tours shortly before Ali’s death in 2016. Bochetto and his business partner at the time renovated the frame house to how it looked when Ali — known then as Cassius Clay — lived there with his parents and younger brother.
“You walk into this house ... you’re going back to 1955, and you’re going to be in the middle of the Clay family home,” Bochetto told The Associated Press during a 2016 interview.
Using old photos, the developers replicated the home’s furnishings, appliances, artwork and even its pink exterior from Ali’s days living there. The museum featured videos focused on the story of Ali’s upbringing, not his storied boxing career.
“To me, that’s the bigger story and the more important story,” Bochetto said in an interview last week.
Ali got his start in boxing after his bicycle was stolen. Wanting to report the crime, the 12-year-old Ali was introduced to Joe Martin, a police officer who doubled as a boxing coach at a local gym. Ali told Martin he wanted to whip the culprit. The thief was never found, nor was the bike, but Ali became a regular in Martin’s gym.
Ali lived in the home when he left for the 1960 Olympics. He returned as a gold medal winner, launching a career that made him one of the world’s most recognizable figures as a three-time heavyweight boxing champion and globetrotting humanitarian.
The home became a worldwide focal point on the day of Ali’s burial, when hundreds of people lined the street in front of the house as his hearse and funeral procession slowly passed by.
Despite its high-profile debut, the museum ran into financial troubles and closed less than two years after opening. The museum is situated in a western Louisville neighborhood several miles from downtown, where the Muhammad Ali Center preserves his humanitarian and boxing legacies.
As efforts to reopen the childhood museum languished, offers to move the 1,200-square-foot (111-square-meter) house to Las Vegas, Philadelphia and even Saudi Arabia were turned down, Bochetto said.
“I wouldn’t do that because it’s an important piece of Louisville history, Kentucky history and I think it needs to stay right where it is,” he said.
Las Vegas real estate investor Jared Weiss bought the Ali childhood house — then rundown and vacant — in 2012 for $70,000 with plans to restore it. Three years later, Weiss formed a partnership with Bochetto, who acquired a half interest in the project. Both were avid fans of Ali, and they spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on the restoration project. They also purchased the two neighboring homes, financed a documentary, subsidized museum operations and incurred expenses for all three properties. Weiss has since died and his wife is the project’s co-owner, Bochetto said.
Now, Bochetto said he’s hoping they’ll find a buyer with the “marketing and operational know-how” to make the museum a success.
“I want to make sure that it continues in that fashion and never goes back to where it’s abandoned or dilapidated,” he said. “That should never have happened.”
veryGood! (68843)
Related
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Olympic surfer's head injury underscores danger of competing on famous wave in Tahiti
- USA Women's Basketball vs. Japan live updates: Olympic highlights, score, results
- Jessica Springsteen goes to Bruce and E Street Band show at Wembley instead of Olympics
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Jessica Chastain’s 2 Kids Make Rare Public Appearance at 2024 Olympics
- Justin Bieber Cradles Pregnant Hailey Bieber’s Baby Bump in New Video
- Colts owner Jim Irsay makes first in-person appearance since 2023 at training camp
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Park Fire is the largest of more than 100 fires currently ablaze across US
Ranking
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Can your blood type explain why mosquitoes bite you more than others? Experts weigh in.
- USA's Katie Grimes, Emma Weyant win Olympic swimming silver, bronze medals in 400 IM
- Olympic medals today: What is the medal count at 2024 Paris Games on Monday?
- Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
- Shop Coach Outlet’s Whimsical Collection: Score Fairy Cottagecore Bags and Fashion up to 65% Off
- A group of 2,000 migrants advance through southern Mexico in hopes of reaching the US
- The oddball platypus is in trouble. Researchers have a plan to help.
Recommendation
Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
Video shows a vortex of smoke amid wildfire. Was it a fire tornado?
Quake rattles Southern California desert communities, no immediate reports of damage
Can your blood type explain why mosquitoes bite you more than others? Experts weigh in.
Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
Starter homes are worth $1 million in 237 U.S. cities. See where they're located.
Watch: How to explore famous museums around the world with Google Arts & Culture
Nellie Biles talks reaction to Simone Biles' calf tweak, pride in watching her at Olympics