- 2 Bathrooms
- 3 Rooms
- 124 m2
- Year Built: 1900
- Piano:3
Description
HISTORICAL CENTER – A few steps from Piazza Campo de’ Fiori and Largo Argentina, in an extremely quiet street, inside a building without a lift, we offer the sale of an apartment on the third floor of 124 square meters with beautiful views.
Composed of: large entrance, living room, kitchen, three bedrooms, one double with ensuite bathroom and additional bathroom with bathtub. The presence of a large communal terrace at the level makes this property really special.
The strategic location guarantees comfort and easy access to the services and main attractions of the city. This is the ideal opportunity to live in the beating heart of the capital. The apartment, completely restored in the 90s, retains some original elements such as wooden coffered ceilings. It is a property of great charm, ideal for residential use in a very quiet part of the historic city, well served and able to offer a high quality of life. The property is also suitable to be a safe and excellent investment in one of the most sought after areas of the historic center.
PECULIARITY:
– Bright
– Excellent internal distribution
– Panoramic views
– Strategic position
– Shared terrace level
The asking price is € 850.000,00 – Real estate consultant: Daniele Battisti RIF64BH24 Tel 06.96006341
The square takes its name from Benedetto Cairoli (1825-1889), who also had his residence here, in the Tanlongo palace, as recalled by the plaque on the palace.
Previously it was called Piazza Tagliacozza in honor of Isabella di Tagliacozzo (1241-1270), who married the leader Napoleone Orsini (died 1282). In the square there is a fountain, erected in 1888. The vase of the granite fountain of Baveno comes from the
Roman Forum. In the square there is also the monument to the Italian patriot and politician Federico Seismit-Doda (1825-1893), executed in 1919 by the sculptor Eugenio Maccagnani (1852-1930). On the north side of the square is the church of San Carlo ai Catinari. It was built between 1612 and 1620 on designs by Rosato Rosati, while the travertine façade is the work of Giovanni Battista Soria in 1638.
On the west side of the square is the Palazzo Santacroce alla Regola, designed by Francesco Peparelli. The fountain in the courtyard of the palace depicts the goddess Venus in a shell, flanked by dolphins and putti.