The glassy midcentury house where Cameron Frye had one of film's greatest conniptions in the greatest playing-hooky story of our time, Ferris Bueller's Day Off, is now on the market for $1.65 million.

Designer by architects A. James Speyer and David Haid in 1953, the cantilevered steel-and-glass property offers 5,300 square feet of living space and floor-to-ceiling windows throughout. Word of advice? Make like Cameron quick—"I am not going to sit on my ass as the events that affect me unfold to determine the course of my life"—and scoop this one up fast before Rooney gets word of your mischief-doing.

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Republished with permission from Curbed.com. Authored by Sarah Firshein. Photo via Curbed.com and HuffingtonPost.com.