A Malibu, California, home once featured on Star Trek: The Next Generation has been listed for $US5.7 million.

The triangular-shaped house was designed by California-based architect, Ellis David Gelman, who originally built the house for himself.

“Looking from the outside, it looks like a real triangle,” says Ani Dermenjian, the agent representing the property. But “when you’re inside the house, it’s high ceilings throughout no matter where you are.”

Built in 1981, the four-bedroom, three-and-a-half-bathroom main home has a dining room, a media room, a master suite, two fireplaces, and a Sonos sound system, according to the listing.

The approximately 344sqm main home’s interior also has luxury materials.

The kitchen includes a double oven, emerald stone countertops, and a stainless steel breakfast bar.

The rest of the house features luxe details such as slate tile, bamboo flooring, and glass railings throughout.

“The colors of the materials are very neutral, so you can do a lot with it,” Ani explains.

Outside, there’s a garage with space for two cars, as well as a driveway with room for 10 cars.

There are separate rose and lavender gardens, and the property also includes a one-room guesthouse with its own bathroom.

The abode sits on 0.8 of a hectare of flat land, most of which is usable, says Ani. “You can put in a pool, you can put in a horse facility, you can do a lot with it,” she adds.

The property was purchased by its current owners, Rouben and Nina Terzian, in 2007 for $US4.7 million, property records show.

Rouben is a toymaker who helped create toys such as My Size Barbie, and was inducted in the Toy Industry Hall of Fame in 1998.

The house was featured in a 1989 episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation. In the season three episode, Captain Jean-Luc Picard and his crew go down to an abandoned planet and find two people who survived a disaster that wiped out the rest of the population.

The property was used as the planet’s setting.

This article originally appeared on Mansion Global.