Playboy Mansion for sale but Hugh Hefner wants to stay put

In this May 1, 1997, file photo, Victoria Silvstedt poses with her brand new Porsche in front of the Playboy Mansion in Beverly Hills, Calif.
In this May 1, 1997, file photo, Victoria Silvstedt poses with her brand new Porsche in front of the Playboy Mansion in Beverly Hills, Calif.

LOS ANGELES — The Playboy Mansion is up for sale, but longtime resident Hugh Hefner wants to stay put.

Playboy Enterprise said the West Los Angeles estate, the backdrop of many film shoots and wild parties, was listed on Monday for $200 million.

The 5-acre property features 29 rooms, a game house, home theater, wine cellar and the famous swimming pool with a cave-like grotto where Playboy bunnies partied with celebrities. The mansion also comes with a rare zoo license.

As a condition of the sale, magazine founder Hefner would get to continue living there as he has since the company bought the mansion 45 years ago for just over $1 million, company spokesman John Vlautin said.

The sale comes as Playboy, which has been has seen its circulation plunge as it competed with more sexually explicit magazines and online porn, seeks to reinvent itself. In October, the magazine that helped launched the sexual revolution, announced that it will stop running photos of completely naked women in its U.S. print edition. The move followed a decision in August 2014 to ban full nudity on its website.

Playboy CEO Scott Flanders says the sale would help the company "reinvest in the transformation of our business" while allowing the 89-year-old Hefner to continue living there.

Hefner originally named a home he bought in Chicago in 1959 the Playboy Mansion, but he eventually made the Los Angeles estate, which he dubbed Playboy Mansion West, his permanent home.

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