OFF-PLAN ecological luxury contemporary villa in La Reserva de Sotogrande, Sotogrande Alto with open sea and golf views consisting out;
The ground floor; entrance hall with wheelchair-friendly lift, guest toilet, technical installations room, spacious living/dining area with big open plan kitchen fully equipped with Bosch appliances and separate pantry, furthermore you find on this floor a separate bedroom/study with en-suite bathroom, big covered terraces who give out to the big heated pool of 72,00 m2.
On the first floor: lift, landing, master bedroom with master bathroom and big dressing and of course a huge private terrace.
A distributor leads you to another bedroom with 2 en-suite bathrooms and a terrace.
In the semi-basement, you have a huge carport with stairs with a path that leads to the front entrance.
Also, the lift brings you to this floor where you find another bedroom with an en-suite bathroom, a self-contained apartment, and a games room.
Furthermore, there is a fully self-contained apartment that has a living/galley kitchen area with a bedroom, dressing, and en-suite bathroom.
The self-contained apartment is accessible from the carport, but we could easily make access from the lift area also.
Construction time approx.
10 to 12 months after the licenses.
Warranties
10 years on the structure
5 years on the installations
2 years on the finishing
Benahavís is a Spanish town (pueblo) and municipality in the province of Malaga.
It is a mountain village between Marbella, Estepona, and Ronda, 7 kilometers (4.3 mi) from the coast.
On the southern face of La Serranía de Ronda mountain range, Benahavís is one of the most mountainous villages on the western Costa del Sol, near the resort beaches as well as the spectacular mountains of the Serrania de Ronda.
Its terrain is traversed by the Guadalmina, Guadaiza and Guadalmansa Rivers.
Places of great natural and historic interest are to be found within its boundaries, such as El Cerro del Duque, Daidin and the Montemayor Castle.
During the late 1990s, the Junta de Andalucia constructed a dam on the site of an old marble quarry, and now for much of the year the once ever-flowing Río Guadalmina is a dried-up riverbed.