Jeff Franklin has given up trying to sell it. Now he just wants someone to live there.
The television producer behind “Full House” has re-listed his sprawling Los Angeles estate on the rental market, asking $247,500 a month for a compound that has spent years failing to attract a buyer — and carrying infamy as one of Hollywood’s most blood-soaked addresses.
Villa Andalusia, a 21,000-square-foot Andalusian-style palace on 3.6 acres in Beverly Hills, was last offered for sale at $50 million, according to Realtor.com.
Franklin, who relocated to Miami, has now pivoted to leasing, touting its “breathtaking views,” “lush tropical landscaping,” and what it calls a “masterpiece property fit for royalty.”
What the listing does not mention is that the ground beneath it was the scene of one of the most shocking mass murders in American history.
In the early morning hours of August 9, 1969, members of Charles Manson’s cult entered the home then occupying the site and murdered actress Sharon Tate — who was 8½ months pregnant — along with celebrity hairstylist Jay Sebring, coffee heiress Abigail Folger, writer Wojciech Frykowski, and Steven Parent, who was shot dead in the driveway.
The killings were part of a two-night rampage in which Manson’s followers also murdered supermarket executive Leno LaBianca and his wife, Rosemary, inflicting a combined 169 stab wounds and multiple gunshot injuries across the victims.
The original structure was eventually demolished. Before it was fully razed, Franklin purchased the land for $6 million, then commissioned architect Richard Landry — known for building mega-mansions for Hollywood’s wealthiest — to design the estate from scratch. Construction wrapped in 2006, and Franklin called it home for nearly two decades.
He was characteristically unbothered by the property’s legacy.
“I wanted to incorporate all the influences that I love from various cultures around the world,” Franklin previously told the Wall Street Journal. “There’s a lot of California Casual, and then we add SeaWorld.”
On the subject of Manson, he told the Journal the association was “irrelevant” and “ancient history,” and that it had “absolutely no impact on my life whatsoever.”
The result of his vision is something between a resort and a fever dream.
The nine-bedroom, 18-bathroom estate features a 75-yard pool — said to be the longest in Beverly Hills — connected by a lazy river to a second infinity pool, with six waterfalls, two hot tubs, and a 35-foot waterslide flowing between them.
A swim-up bar, koi pond, firepit and private grotto round out the grounds. Inside, the entertainment infrastructure runs deep: a home theater, poker room, billiards room, hair salon, multiple bars, a spa, a gym, and six aquariums throughout the house, including a shark tank in the dining room.
The aquariums, Franklin once explained, grew out of a personal obsession.
“This actually saves me a lot of traveling around the world,” he quipped.
Heather Altman of Douglas Elliman, who previously held the sales listing, described the estate’s contents in terms that underscored its one-of-a-kind status.
“The seller hand-picked items in Southeast Asia and Europe that are one-of-a-kind pieces,” she told The Post. “The estate cannot be duplicated.”
Joshua Altman, also of Douglas Elliman, put a finer point on the koi pond’s unusual location inside the pool.
“It’s almost like you’re swimming with the fishes,” he told The Post.
The property also served as the venue for the reception following Bob Saget’s funeral in January 2022.
The rental listing is now held by Nina Hunt of Simco Enterprises Inc.
Franklin also previously owned the San Francisco house used for exterior shots of the Tanner family home in “Full House,” which he eventually remodeled and sold in 2020.
Manson, born Charles Maddox in Cincinnati in 1934 to a 16-year-old single mother, spent much of his early life cycling through reform schools and prison. By the time he was released at 32, he had spent nearly half his life institutionalized.
He relocated to Berkeley, assembled a devoted following of women, and by 1968 had convinced his inner circle that a race war — which he called “Helter Skelter,” after the Beatles track — was imminent. The murders he orchestrated that August were meant to accelerate it.
Manson died in prison in 2017 at age 83. The LaBianca home sold in 2021 for $1.8 million.
Last year, a Netflix documentary, “Chaos: The Manson Murders,” revisited the killings with newly surfaced details and crime scene imagery.
