Los Flamingos, Jardines del Albaicin Urbanization, Benahavis, Penthouse for sale with two bedrooms and two bathrooms.
It is located between Marbella and Estepona near the legendary Hotel Villa Padierna and the best golf courses such as Flamingos, Alferini and Tramores with a total of 45 holes, supermarkets, pharmacy and restaurants.
Just three minutes from the beach by car.
10 minutes from Puerto Banus, 15 minutes from Marbella and 40 from Malaga airport.
This penthouse is ideal for investment due to its profitability for both vacation and long-term rental, residential or as a second residence to spend the best golf seasons.
Private urbanization with a large tropical garden, community pools, one of them with a beautiful waterfall, quiet, very safe.
It has a construction with high quality finishes, with marble floors, interior carpentry in white wood, kitchen furnished and equipped with top quality appliances.
On the main floor there is a living room, kitchen, and master bedroom suite.
On the second floor, a bedroom suite with access to two fantastic terraces, one of them with 80 square meters distributed in a chill out area, and a barbecue area where you can enjoy a fantastic event with your family and friends, and a panoramic solarium of 20 meters.
A property that can stop being a dream to become a reality.
Are you going to let this opportunity pass?
JLP
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.