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Sardegna – Arzachena si vende proprieta’ di circa 16 ettari, collinare con rocce, vegetazione, laghetto e progetto approvato per casa da circa 100 mq. oltre cantine ed accessori . Prezzo interessante.
Trattative riservate. Pagamento da definire.
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Sardinia – Arzachena for sale a property of about 16 hectares, on a hill with rocks and vegetation, a small lake and with a licence to build an house of about 100 s.m. more cellar, tavern , terraces.
Price very interesting.
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Clicca per ingrandire /Click to enlarge
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Villas to buy in Sardinia
Villas to buy in Sardinia by Promosar Real Estate
Small
enough to be classified as an island but big enough to be
a universe unto itself, Sardinia lies about 120 miles west
of the Italian peninsula. Its coastline is probably Europe's
most spectacular. Its waters teem with fish and shellfish.
Its broad valleys turn into golden oceans of wheat in summer.
Its rugged mountains, pocked with caves, are home to large
flocks of sheep that feed on pungent wild herbs and produce
a cheese your palate will never forget. Nestled into its silent
olive groves are some of the continent's oldest archeological
remains, dating back to 1700 BC. Its people speak a language
incomprehensible to all other Italians, celebrate more saints'
days than anyone else in the nation, and love to dress up
in elaborate costumes at the drop of a finely-embroidered
hat.
But Sardinia is not for the faint-hearted. In summer, the
heat can be blistering. Winter winds are some of the most
vicious in the Mediterranean. Hotels and restaurants can be
either outrageously expensive or dismally primitive. Public
transportation is unreliable and moves at a snail's pace.
Even getting to the island can be arduous, especially in summer
when ferries and planes are packed. Sardinia is for adventurers,
for those of us who like to feel we've accomplished something
when we travel, those who want to push just a little bit farther
than the crowd, those who are intrigued, not frightened, by
civilizations that initially may seem inexplicable. Sardinia,
it seems, is just the kind of place In Italy's readers are
looking for.
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