Beautiful Spanish style house with a plot of 9.2 hectares.
First floor with entrance hall, guest bedroom with bathroom en suite, another bedroom with bathroom, large living room with lumen shift, impeccable kitchen complete with office area, pantry and laundry room.
Covered garage for 2 cars and open garage for another 6.
Upper floor with 4 bedrooms and 3 full bathrooms, 2 of them ensuite.
It has unbeatable views of the sea and the mountains from any point of the house.
2,000 square meter garden with gym and infinity pool.
It has its own wells.
It has an guest house with 2 floors.
Ground floor with 1 bedroom and 1 bathroom.
Upper floor with 1 bedroom, 1 bathroom, kitchen, living-dining room and terrace
Stable for 11 horses and separate stable for 1 pony.
Walker for 4 horses, covered riding arena 62x22 meters with geotextile surface with lighting.
One of the stables is heated.
Own well, small pond for ducks and swans and chicken house.
15 minutes from the center of Malaga and the airport and 5 minutes from the A7 motorway.
Málaga ( ; Spanish: [ˈmalaɣa] ) is a municipality of Spain, capital of the Province of Málaga, in the autonomous community of Andalusia.
With a population of 592,346 in 2024, it is the 2nd-largest city in Andalusia and the 6th-largest in the country.
It lies in Southern Iberia on the Costa del Sol ('Coast of the Sun') of the Mediterranean, primarily on the left bank of the Guadalhorce.
The urban core originally developed in the space between the Gibralfaro Hill and the Guadalmedina.
Málaga's history spans about 2,800 years, making it one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities in Western Europe.
According to most scholars, it was founded about 770 BC by the Phoenicians from Tyre as Malaka.
From the 6th century BC the city was under the hegemony of Ancient Carthage, and from 218 BC, it was under Roman rule, economically prospering owing to garum production.
In the 8th century, after a period of Visigothic and Byzantine rule, it was placed under Islamic rule.
In 1487, the Crown of Castile gained control in the midst of the Granada War.
In the 19th century, the city underwent a period of industrialisation followed by a decay in all socioeconomic parametres in the last third of the century.
The most important business sectors in Málaga are tourism, construction and technology services, but other sectors such as transportation and logistics are beginning to expand.
Málaga has consolidated as a tech hub, with companies mainly concentrated in the Málaga TechPark (Technology Park of Andalusia).
It hosts the headquarters of the region's largest bank, Unicaja, and it is the fourth-ranking city in Spain in terms of economic activity behind Madrid, Barcelona and Valencia.
Regarding transportation, Málaga is served by the Málaga–Costa del Sol Airport and the Port of Málaga, and the city was connected to the high-speed railway network in 2007.