Whitney's Bathtub
This photo, released by TMZ on Tuesday, shows the bathtub where Whitney Houston's dead body was found. It was taken moments after her body was removed from the water, according to TMZ. TMZ.com

Whitney Houston's hotel room is being rented out just 3 days after she died there.

Room 434 at the Beverly Hilton hotel will live forever in infamy as the place where Houston drew her last breath, but that's not keeping hotel staff from offering it to hotel customers, TMZ reported Tuesday.

TMZ reports that a hotel reservations agent at Beverly Hilton told the site that the $375/night room where the 48-year-old singer was found dead in a bathtub Saturday morning is back on the market for hotel visitors, and that it is being actively courted by (twisted?) people who want to visit the scene on their own.

In fact, TMZ reports that the room is booked for the foreseeable future, meaning it may be hard for you to visit the scene of Whitney Houston's death, though you really probably shouldn't want to.

A message left by the International Business Times with the Beverly Hilton on Tuesday went unanswered Tuesday afternoon.

Whitney Houston, one of history's all-time best-selling musicians, was pronounced dead on Saturday at 3:55 p.m. PT. The newest news reports state that the singer died of a combination of drugs and alcohol. Initially, her cause of death was rumored to be drowning, as the singer was found in the bathtub of her hotel room. However, there was reportedly not enough water in the tub for the singer to drown.

A toxicology report and official autopsy may not be available for the next six to eight weeks. Houston's last meal included room-service, champagne and Heineken. Empty medicine bottles were found her hotel room, along with pills like Xanax and ibuprofen.

Whitney Houston's private funeral is slated to take place Saturday at the New Hope Baptist Church, where Houston began her singing career at a young age in her hometown of Newark, N.J. The funeral, which is invite-only, is being handled by Newark's Whigham Funeral Home in Newark, which also tended to the funeral affairs of Whitney Houston's father, John Houston.