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Posts Tagged ‘italian property’

Property sale volumes saw a greater drop in Italian provinces than in the provincial capitals, and in the North more than in the South. Florence and Venice were the two best performing cities. Read more on Italymag.co.uk.

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Live the castle life in a splendidly renovated three-bedroom apartment in Bocchignano, Lazio. Read more on Italymag.co.uk.

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Prices for Italian mountain properties went down by 0.1% in the first half of 2008, but some villages, such as Courmayeur, in the Aosta valley, bucked the trend with lively demand and an increase in values. Read more on Italymag.co.uk.

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The Italian property market has slowed down, buyers have become choosier but the country’s artistic heritage, prudent mortgage policies and tight planning controls ensure it is weathering the credit storm better than many other developed economies. This article appeared in Country Life.

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Framed by tall cypresses, an old stone tower soars high over the mellow countryside outside Cortona. Set in a listed estate, Torre di Lombardi affords far-reaching views across the precise geometry of the neighbouring fields, the soft hills beyond and the fortress-topped outline of Cortona. Read more on Italymag.co.uk.

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The town council of Salemi, in Sicily, is selling 3,700 earthquake-wrecked houses for a pittance to anyone who agrees to restore them sympathetically in under two years. Read more on Italymag.co.uk.

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Buy it in…Molise

Vast stretches of woodland, a lively property market and affordable prices conspire to make tiny Molise an interesting place to buy a second home. Read more on Italymag.co.uk.

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A research by Italian parking company Idealpark shows that garages in large Italian cities cost more than anywhere else in the world. Read more on Italymag.co.uk.

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A conversation about property prices spurred me to try and find Italian properties for sale priced at €100,000 or less. It is not easy— but I succeeded. The three best were a fortified farmhouse in Sicily, a panoramic flat in Lazio, and a tiny house in Le Marche. Read more about it on Italymag.co.uk.

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