REDUCED - Price negociable.
For sale this authentic Spanish house, with great potential and amazing views, located in between Estación de Cártama and Pizarra.
For those who look for a renovation project with an authentic finca!
The main house has a layout with a big kitchen / dining area and access to a large bathroom with double sinks and shower.
The living room has a traditional feel to it and has a big working fireplace and air conditioning.
From the living room you have access to two bedrooms and to the large terrace over looking the valley and the surrounding mountains.
At the back of the house is an attached building that can be used as an independent guest apartment.
Ideal for big families or if you want to do some rentals or connect to the main house and make the main house bigger.
There is a seperate carport and a very big garage / annex workshop.
The views from the terrace are amazing and it is very private and quiet, except the fact that it can be in the flight path of Malaga airport.
The house is originilly build before 1940 and lots of elements are still like that.
It has kept it's charm but also means that it is needs the work to make it totally to your own taste.
So it is in need of renvation.
The plot is about 67.000m2 of hilly land.
The road towards the house is all concreted and the last part is up hill and about 5 minutes from the main road of Estacion de Cartama to Pizarra, where also is a bus stop.
The train station of Aljaima is about a 6 to 7 minute drive and Pizarra and Estacion de Cartama are 10 to 12 minutes.
At this moment only the mainhouse is registered.
It is possible to get all registered, this is confirmed by a lawyer, but the owner is selling it like it is.
There is no water connection and no own well, the water suplly is by delivery with trucks.
It has electricity and wifi.
A video is available.
Pizarra is a town and municipality in the province of Málaga, part of the autonomous community of Andalusia in southern Spain.
The municipality is situated approximately 30 kilometres from Málaga.
It is located in the center of the province and belongs to the comarca of Valle del Guadalhorce.
The town is served by the Málaga Metropolitan Transport Consortium Metropolitan bus lines.
The municipality of Pizarra is located in a strategic area in the Guadalhorce Valley region, between Álora and Cártama.
It is 10 km from Álora and around 13 km from Cártama.
Pizarra is crossed by the Guadalhorce River along 8.5 kilometres (which has a width of 11.5) and 8 km, from east to west and from north to south, respectively.
Pizarra is also surrounded by Almogía, Cártama, Coín, Álora, and Casarabonela .
It is located 80 meters above sea level.
Its highest point is in the Sierra de Gibralmora, 447 meters above sea level, which offers, on the side facing Pizarra, a unique landscape of sandstone rocks that is made spectacular by some of the shapes that this rock presents at the top.
Pizarra is very well connected to its capital, Málaga, which is 30 km away and can be reached from the town by road, bus or rail.
Pizarra is a municipality dedicated to irrigation, as it has a municipal surface area of just over 64 km² dedicated to this.
The local products of the land are typical of the Guadalhorce Valley, as are the neighbouring towns.
In dry land, the most important crops are olive and almond trees, and to a lesser extent, but no less important, cereals and legumes.
As for irrigated land, lemon and orange trees predominate.
In the western half of the area, the new irrigation systems of the Guadalhorce have transformed the small hills and undulating terrain into terraces where citrus fruits, subtropical crops and other fruit trees are grown, completing and enhancing the landscape of traditional orchards.
Centuries-old carob trees, olive trees, fig trees, almond trees, walnut trees and fruit trees beautify the landscape all year round.
Drinking water comes from the high mountains, which are rich in streams.
Land ownership, on the other hand, is more concentrated here, which produces a high number of temporary workers, seasonal workers who depend on the harvest season, and others to a lesser extent who are self-employed.
On the other hand, there is little incidence of agricultural cooperatives.
In livestock farming, the most prominent are chicken and pig farms.
Hence, there are feed and flour factories, as well as some textile cooperatives and metal carpentry workshops.
The construction sector is more dynamic than the industrial sector.
The tertiary sector employs a quarter of the population.
This is where the future of these towns lies, through the symbiosis of nature, work and services.
In recent years, rural tourism has become more important.