Tyrese Gibson’s Speedy Luxury: Fast X Star’s Villa Boasts a Splendid Terrace Retreat

The Woodland Hills, California, compound that Atlanta-based singer and actor Tyrese Gibson has listed at a tetch under $2.9 mllon is an unremarkable, tan-colored Mediterranean-ish house that almost no one passing by would notice or look at twice. He paid $1.385 mllon shortly after it was built 11 years ago.

Since the late 1990s, the singer of “Sweet Lady” and “How You Gonna Act Like That” has put out six studio albums and, by some accounts, sold over three million copies of each. He has starred in three “Transformers” movies and five “Fast & Furious” movies, with the latter being more successful. Soon, you may see him in two more “Fast & Furious” movies and the “Spider-Man” spinoff “Morbius” alongside Jared Leto. Now he’s on the path to stardom as an actor as well as a singer.

The main house on Gibson’s almost half-acre lot has five bedrooms (including a master suite with two walk-in closets and a terrace) and 5.5 bathrooms. The property was featured on Zillow Gone Wild and is listed by “Selling Sunset” star Jason Oppenheim of The Oppenheim Group.

The main house on Gibson’s almost half-acre lot has five bedrooms (including a master suite with two walk-in closets and a terrace) and 5.5 bathrooms. The property was featured on Zillow Gone Wild and is listed by “Selling Sunset” star Jason Oppenheim of The Oppenheim Group.

The living room is enormous, furnished mostly in white slipcovers and including a baby grand piano and a modern black fireplace.

A big, high-end kitchen that extends to the dining area and family room complements the home theater’s brown microsuede seating.

The majority of the bathrooms, including the master, are outfitted with beige tiles and medium-brown wooden cabinets. But behind the scenes, it’s like being at a different carnival.

A giant yellow Transformer commands a fire pit encircled by a circular built-in bench with patriotic red, white, and blue cushions. (Gibson had a similar statue in the front yard and foyer of his Atlanta estate.)

There is a full Benihana-style Teppanyaki setup hidden behind shoji screens in an Asian-themed poolside pavilion that also features an outdoor kitchen, a built-in grilling station and bar with cherry-red counters, and a half bathroom.