Legendary Green Bay Packers head coach Vince Lombardi's first house is up for sale.

According to Richard Ryman of the Green Bay Press-Gazette, the listing price of the house is almost $600,000.

The house that Vince Lombardi lived in when he first moved to Green Bay in 1959 is for sale.

Lombardi lived in the house at 222 W. Mission Road for about a year before moving to a new, custom-built ranch at 667 Sunset Circle, less than two miles away.

He lived there the balance of his time while coaching the Green Bay Packers. Lombardi moved to Washington, D.C. in 1969 to coach the (Washington) Redskins. He died of colon cancer in 1970.

The 4,395-square-foot house sits on a double lot less than a half-mile from the Fox River. It has four bedrooms and three bathrooms. The listing price is $599,900.

Ryman says other individuals with Green Bay Packers connections lived in the house as well. Former Packers vice president Jason Wied was the owner before the current one bought it. Citing Brown County real estate records, Ryman says Wied sold the house for $475,000 in 2014.

John Wemple, a publisher of many Green Bay Packers yearbooks, also owned the house, per the Green Bay Press-Gazette.

David Maraniss is the author of Lombardi's biography “When Pride Still Mattered.” He mentioned the house in the book when the Lombardis went on a cross-country trip to New York, per Ryman.

The excerpt of the book says, “Green Bay was more a blur of white. Fresh snow was falling by the time they turned down West Mission Road in Allouez and spotted No. 222, the two-story Georgian house on the corner.”

Expect the next owner of Vince Lombardi's first house to be a bona fide Green Bay Packers fan.