
It’s hardly the home you’d expect for a Hollywood star.
But this one-bedroom mobile is the home where former Baywatch star Pamela Anderson is currently residing.
According to some reports the 42-year-old is said to be living at the Paradise Cove address in Los Angeles for the foreseeable future due to a legal wrangle over her luxury beach house.
The blonde allegedly owes $1.1million to various construction companies for renovation work on her Malibu home as well as back state taxes, Los Angeles County records show.
According to the documents, five different construction companies have filed claims against her home.

The largest is $674,043 for ‘labour and materials… to remodel main house, construct swimming pool, construct foundations for guest house.’
In addition to liens from countless other construction companies, Pam also owes $252,360 to California’s Franchise Tax Board in unpaid income tax from 2007.
‘A lot of people are owed a lot of money,’ Jay Bruder, boss of Bruder Construction, said.
According to the documents Bruder filed a $674,043 lien against Pam for the cost of ‘labour and materials and subcontractors to remodel main house, construct foundations for guest house’.
Pamela has rubbished reports that she has money troubles, however.
It comes after long-term friend Caitlin Ross claimed the actress has spent millions on her partying lifestyle.
‘When you’re a superstar like Pam, you think the money will never stop,’ she told Now magazine.

‘Pam hardly ever checked her bank account, she just assumed it was a never-ending reservoir, and she spent like it was.’
But in a statement, Anderson insisted she was financially secure, while admitting she was dealing with the legal issues over her home.
It read: ‘I’m financially secure. It is true that I am in a dispute with some of the contractors working on my home.
This is because after paying millions of dollars to build the house I continue to get bills from the contractors.
‘My lawyers are reviewing the work done to see if the bills are fair. If they are, they’ll be paid. If they aren’t, they won’t be.’
On the issue of the allegedly unpaid $252,000 in taxes, she added: ‘On a separate issue, mistakes may have been made in calculating taxes owed,’ reads the statement to People.
‘We are now in the process of ensuring that any taxes owed are paid.’
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