Very nice single-storey country house, overlooking the Guadalhorce valley, only 20 minutes from the centre of Málaga.
This house is distributed as follows:
It has fitted kitchen, large living room and dining room with fireplace, master bedroom with bathroom, 2 guest bedrooms and a guest bathroom.
Outside is a beautiful garden with trees, barbecue, large swimming pool, covered parking, and a large storage room.
This house is in an idyllic area, quiet location, just a 10-minute walk to the Sierra de Mijas.
Ideal for nature lovers and only 15 minutes drive from Málaga.
If you want to live in a quiet place, surrounded by olive trees and forest and birdsong, then this is the ideal place for you.
Call us for more information!
Alhaurín el Grande is a town located in the province of Málaga in the autonomous community of Andalusia in southern Spain.
It covers an area of 73.1 km2 extending from the northern slope of the Sierra de Mijas and the plain of the Guadalhorce river, where alternate crops of citrus and other fruit trees orchards are found.
The population reaches 23,675 inhabitants, according to 2010 data.
The origin of the name was given by the Arabs, who called it "Alhaurin", where the Catholic Monarchs added "el Grande" to distinguish it from the neighboring town of Alhaurín de la Torre after the conquest of both sites in 1485.
It is situated between the river Fahala and the stream of Blas González.
The coast is close by and there is a network of roads to get there.
There is a road to Málaga Airport and Torremolinos, which takes about 30 minutes by car.
A new road was built in 2010 connecting the town with Fuengirola and the beach which is only 20 minutes drive.
There is also another new road to Marbella, to the southwest with Mijas just along a winding road round the mountain.
From Alhaurín there is a view over the "Hoya de Málaga", Málaga's vale, full of lemon trees and other fruit trees.
Villafranco del Guadalhorce is a village within Alhaurín el Grande's municipal territory.
It was founded by colonist families in the 1950s and subsidized by the Instituto Nacional de Colonización of the Spanish government.