Property Description
Detached house with garden.
The detached house with garden is located in the municipality of San Siro, precisely 200 m. from the lake and 500 m. from the centre.
It is a house independent on all four sides and arranged on two levels. The property is composed as follows: in the basement we find the tavern, the bathroom and the entrance; on the ground floor living room, kitchen, double bedroom, bedroom and bathroom.
The garden has a surface area of approximately 400 m2, while the house measures approximately 75 m2. At 150 m. from the property there is a convenient municipal car park.
The house is habitable, to be partially renovated with a lake view from some points of the garden.
SAN SIRO
The Municipality of San Siro unites the medieval villages of Acquaseria, Santa Maria and Rezzonico. There are numerous points of historical and artistic interest including the famous “Castellaccio” on the lake built by the Della Torre family in 1300, still well preserved and the famous Villa La Gaeta designed by the famous architects Coppedè. Today the village is brought to life by numerous activities including hotels, restaurants, shops and for this reason it is increasingly appreciated also on a tourist level. The municipality is well served, it is located in a strategic position from which it is possible to quickly reach both the center of the lake, such as the beautiful town of Menaggio, and the beauties of the upper Lario. There are beautiful houses for sale in San Siro and the real estate market is growing rapidly.
The Church of Santa Maria, from which the name of the hamlet derives, dates back to the second half of the fifteenth century.
The church has a Renaissance-era access portal, in Musso marble, the work of the Rodari family school. The portal is surmounted by an architrave with high relief decorations with a naturalistic theme, among which a melusine stands out. Internally, the church preserves paintings by Sigismondo De Magistris (1547, in the first chapel on the right), by Michelangelo Carminati (1564, in the presbytery), by Isidoro Bianchi (in the fourth chapel on the left) and by Giovanni Pietro Gnocchi.