
After their infamous day out on the town in Cameron Frye's father's Ferrari, Ferris Bueller tried to talk Cameron off the proverbial ledge as they realized that running the car backwards would not put the miles they had driven without permission back on the odometer.
Cameron's breakdown ensued, and he pushed the sports car off the actual ledge of the glass-enclosed garage on stilts.
The house, a luxury home in Illinois' Highland Park, is now on the market for $2.3 million, according to the Chicago Sun Times.
Known as the Ben Rose Home, the two-building structure made mostly of steel and glass served as a memorable set for the 1986 hit film, "Ferris Bueller's Day Off."
It was designed by architects A. James Speyer and David Haid and, as viewers noted two decades ago, it sits magnificently atop a ravine. Built in 1953, the famous garage holds three cars and is detached from the main house.
According to a listing for the four-bedroom, four bathroom house, it offers 5,300 square feet of living space and is being sold by Sudler Soethby's Intertantional Realtors.
It has already piqued the interest of several would-be buyers, The Sun Times reports.
Photos: 'Ferris Bueller's Day Off' Ferrari 250 GT Spyder and more famous cars










