Owners of Kurt Cobain's childhood home want to open it up for private tours

Some day soon, you may be able to tour Kurt Cobain's childhood home in Aberdeen, Washington -- that is, if the home's current owners has anything to say about it.

Lee Bacon and his wife Danielle bought the house, where the late Nirvana frontman lived from 1968 to 1984,  in 2018 from the Cobain family.  Since then, Rolling Stone reports, they've been working to restore it to the way it looked in the '70s and '80s. It even has the Cobain family's blessing: They've donated Kurt's toddler bedroom set, as well as the mattress from his bedroom and their old dining room table and china hutch.

So far, the home has been officially approved for inclusion of Washington state's Heritage Register of buildings that are culturally important.  While it's not properly zoned to become an actual museum, Bacon says he wants to open it up in the coming months for private tours, and is trying to work out the logistics now.

Rolling Stone adds that Bacon has also bought another building in downtown Aberdeen, where he plans to open an 8,000-square-foot "Tribute Lounge and Gallery Cafe" dedicated to Kurt.  He envisions it as a space that will "tell the story of the house" and Kurt's childhood years via artifacts, memorabilia, photos and more.  Admission to that will be free, he says, and so will admission to the house, if he's allowed to open it for tours.

Bacon also plans to install a plaque on the front of the house, telling Rolling Stone, "We have to write it for someone in the future, 20 years from now, who wants to learn about Kurt. We want it to be for someone who doesn't know who he was or the contributions he made."

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