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Casa Sant’arcangelo

Good level of comfort. Well equipped interior. Good size pool and nice external dining area. Excellent location.
Brindisi in Puglia, Italy
from £1,095 per week
2 beds 4 people Air Conditioning Satellite TV

Ref: IBR128D

This beautifully peaceful holiday retreat for two couples or a family has all the great attributes of the normal single-storey trullo, just without the cones. Freshly and authentically renovated from top to bottom in 2006, this trullo also blends very well with its surroundings, namely the chocolate-brown landscape, the white field walls and the centuries-old olive groves, amongst which the swimming pool is located.

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Key Features

Additional Information

The grounds are naturally shady, fenced in, with al fresco dining area and barbecue and there is ample parking.

The furnished swimming pool has an outside shower and is open between 15th May and 30th September (weather permitting).

Ground Floor:
Sitting/dining room with open fireplace
Shower room with WC and washing machine
Compact kitchen with stove, oven, microwave oven, toaster, kettle, dishwasher and fridge/freezer
Two twin/double bedded rooms with insect screens

  • Check in: 4:00pm
  • Check out: 10:00am

In Summary

Facilities

  • Heating
  • Shower
  • Bike
  • Phone
  • Dishwasher
  • BBQ
  • Air Conditioning
  • Washing Machine
  • Satellite TV

Availability and Price

Fill out how many days you wish to stay, as well as the number of people travelling.

We may be able to accommodate shorter breaks please call or email for details.

Location


  • Punta Penna Grossa 22.0 km

  • San Michele Salentino 2.0 km

  • 29.0 km from Brindisi Airport

The town of San Michele Salentino is a mere 2 kilometres away (walking distance) and has the essential range of shops, restaurants, banks, chemists etc. This being the Ionian-Salentinian area of Puglia, touring around is a delight - discovering abandoned beaches (the nearest 23 kilometres away), enjoying un-crowded unhurried towns and appreciating the sheer variety of the architecture and art.

Italians have been keeping quiet about their "heel" for years - and for good reason - sun-filled, brightly coloured, a region of olive trees, wheatfields and vineyards, almost biblical in their multitudes, a singular finger of level land, pointing benevolently at Greece, that juts out into the southern Adriatic.

From the green three-sided promontory that is the Gargano National Park in the north, to the flatter central area dotted with conical-roofed "trulli", topped off by the region’s capital Bari, to the southern Ionian-Salento tip and gateway to the Balkans, Puglia is the perfect place for an uncrowded holiday.

Vibrant sunlit colours are Puglia’s trademark look - the deep blue of its vast skies, the dark silvery green of its olive groves and vineyards, stitched alongside patchwork gold wheatfields, the rich burnt terracotta orange of the earth and the bright white of ever-present dry-stone walls, whitewashed villages and the ubiquitous ’trulli’, especially populous between Alberobello and Martina Franca.

One is never more than 30 miles from Puglia’s coasts. Interlaced by lively fishing villages, they have something for everyone: dramatic limestone cliffs plunging into a turquoise sea, as in the northern forested Gargano area, referred to by the Greek hero, Diomed, as "the happy land"; or they can be bustling, yet beautiful, as at walled Molfetta and Giovinazzo in the central section, where gaily-painted fishing boats land the day’s exotic catches; or at the Ionian-Salento peninsula where the coast does a u-turn and reverts to a rocky grandeur. But nowhere is one far from a tranquil gold-white sandy beach, reminiscent of the Caribbean, the cleanest waters in the Mediterranean and just made for relaxing. Phoenicians, Greeks, Romans, Normans, Saracens and Emperor Frederick II, who studded the region with so many castles and towers, they all left their mark on the people, the cuisine and architecture. Numerous flat-topped whitewashed houses are more typical of Greece or North Africa than Italy. The Normans graced most towns with delightful Romanesque cathedrals, at Trani overlooking the sea, and the ’must-see’ prime example at Bitonto, with its fine pulpit dating from 1229.

This property is part of the “Much More” collection.

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