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We propose for sale a feature habitable house on three floors with a total of 120 sq m.
The property comprises entrance from street level with a living room of about 26 sq m, a kitchen and a small bathroom 9 sqm (1,0x1,0).
The living room and kitchen have a balcony of 6 sq m with panoramic views, you can see the sea too.
From street level, through an internal staircase lead to the first floor where there are two bedrooms, one of 15 sq m and 11 sqm plus a bathroom and a hallway 4.3 sq m.
From street level, using the same internal staircase lead down to the first floor below street where there are two small storage rooms cut into the rock (two caves each of 2 sq m.), a bathroom, a bedroom and a hallway through which one comes out on a external staircase leading to the garden of 60 sq m.
From the garden you are accessing a local winery (second floor below street) about 20 sq m.
Downstream of the garden which is fenced, there is a plot of 190 sq m.
The property is well presented and completed with installation, electricity, gas, water and sewerage.
The small and ancient village of PALOMBARO (altitude 536 m above sea level, approximately 1.180 inhabitants) is situated at the foot of Martellese (2,252 m), in the Majella National Park, on top of a hill from where you can enjoy a beautiful landscape. The most important monument of the town is the beautiful church of the Assumption (1561), with its imposing bell tower in neo-Gothic style. In the area of Palombaro and nearby Fara San Martino is set the "State Reserve Fara S. Martino - Palombaro" characterized by huge areas covered by beech, pine, black pine and other plant species of natural interest. The Reserve is an ideal habitat for many species of birds and is also frequented by brown Marsicano bear and the Apennine Wolf. A few kilometers from the town, on a rocky wall inside the Natural Reserve of the Feud Ugni, there is the suggestive "Grotta Sant'Angelo", which preserves the apse of a beautiful medieval cave church (XI cent.). The spectacular and rugged walls of the Palombaro valley are characterized by the presence of numerous caves, often sealed with dry-stone walls, called pastoral because caves gave refuge to the shepherds who were leading their flocks on pasture, sometimes inaccessible, the Martellese or Macchia.
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