The new buyer will be getting three bedrooms and 2,700 square feet of quirky San Francisco history.
It received two price chops before finally finding a buyer.
The home originally listed for $4.2 million in September 2015.
... George Lucas, O.J. Simpson, and unnamed Silicon Valley investors.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdMany celebrities have been rumored to have lived in, purchased, or bid on the house, including ...
Love it or hate it, the home has become a Bay Area landmark.
They turned it from white to the current orange and purple color scheme.
This criticism has only increased since the current owners bought the property in 1996 for $800,000.
Many have called the home an eyesore, and others are just curious about what it looks like inside.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe home has attracted its share of criticism for its experimental design.
Despite appearances, the home does contain typical appliances.
The kitchen features a center island attached to the roof of the house, which also features a skylight.
At that point, the house also changed hands.
The home fell into disrepair in the '80s, and it was repaired and renovated after mountain-water runoff eventually did major damage to the foundation.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdNonstandard ceilings permeate throughout.
The color scheme inside even matches the exterior.
Tiling and unique artworks cover the entire single-family home and match the exterior.
This gives it that prehistoric, lumpy look, hence the nickname.
The odd shape of the house was created by applying shotcrete to both a steel rebar structure and a series of mesh frames held up by inflated balloons typically used for aeronautical research.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdIt's made from concrete that's been painted orange and purple, though it was first finished in an off-white color when it was built in 1976.
Even from far away, it's easy to see that the Flintstones House isn't a normal property.