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For diehard fans of The Tragically Hip, no price is too steep for memorabilia — but 689 cats might come close.

Priced at $700,000, dedicated fans can now purchase the location for the band’s “Poets” music video, which memorably features the late Gord Downie weaving between dozens of cats crawling over an Elm Street home’s floors and counters while the Hip perform as “The Rodents.”

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The house held a Guinness World Record for keeping nearly 700 cats inside.

The building’s real estate broker, Louis Tavakoli, said the property was part of the city’s cultural history.

“It shows they were always looking at an open picture for what they could utilize in their art,” he said about the video and location.

According to him, the house already received an offer with others expressing interest, partly because of the reliable return off rental properties.

“It’s a great earner,” he said about the income property. As a duplex, potential buyers could make up to $5,000 in rental income.

The house’s previous tenants, Jack and Donna Wright, had a reputation around town: They never turned an animal away. Cats were dropped off at their doorstep until the building housed hundreds and they received a Guinness World Record in 1994 for keeping 689 cats.

Despite the high number of animals, the house received a grandfather exemption after a 1992 bylaw ruled against keeping more than five cats.

When they were at their peak that year, the Wrights claimed it took an 18-hour day to care for all the animals. The rising costs of maintaining the operation came out of the Wrights’ pockets and community donations.

In 2001, The Globe and Mail profiled the house’s former tenants, describing the smell inside as a competition between “cat urine, Pine-Sol cleanser and the odour-fighter Swish-60.”