4-room flat via della Tribuna di Campitelli, Ghetto - Portico d'Ottavia, Rome
RomeGhetto - Portico d'OttaviaVia della Tribuna di Campitelli
€ 795,000
4 rooms
114 m²
2 bathrooms
Floor 1
Luxury
Lift
Only Kitchen Furnished
Note
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Listing updated on 12/09/2024
Description
This description has been translated automatically by Google Translate and may not be accurate
reference: EK-116823891
GHETTO PORTICO D'OTTAVIA - VIA DELLA TRIBUNA CAMPITELLI
Inside the prestigious Palazzo Caetani Lovatelli, in the charming district of S. Angelo, we offer a recently renovated charming apartment with attention to detail. The property comprises: entrance hall, large living room with dining area and pleasant views of the communal gardens, fully furnished kitchen with appliances, a bedroom with loft area, a second loft bedroom usable as a wardrobe or study, a single bedroom, and two bathrooms. The floors are of excellent quality oak parquet. With autonomous heating and hot/cold A/C, this property represents a unique opportunity in the heart of Rome. Currently generating a decent income as it is leased with a 3+2 contract, expiring on 07/31/2026. The building features an elevator and concierge service. Condo fees approximately €100/month. Price: €795,000.00. **The floor plan and information provided in the listing should be considered indicative and not contractually binding.**
Palazzo Caetani Lovatelli overlooks Piazza Campitelli with one portal and Piazza Lovatelli with another, built in 1580 by Gianfilippo Serlupi on some houses, specially demolished, already owned by his family since the fifteenth century. The construction project was probably by Giacomo Della Porta, who however did not see the completion of the works, which ended in 1619 thanks to the intervention of Gianfilippo's brother, Monsignor Girolamo Serlupi: the names of these two members of the Serlupi family were once read on the two portals, that of Girolamo in Piazza Campitelli and that of Gianfilippo in Piazza Lovatelli, formerly called "Piazza Serlupi". Today the names are illegible, although both portals maintain the inscription "CAETANI-LOVATELLI" and the family's heraldic lilies remain on the cornice. In 1744, the family, which had meanwhile inherited the name and especially the assets of the Crescenzi family, sold the palace to the Ruspolis, who in turn sold it to the Lovatellis in the nineteenth century, originally from Ravenna and related to the Caetanis. Here, Countess Ersilia Caetani Lovatelli, daughter of Michelangelo Caetani, was an open salon for artists and literati, appointed, a rare thing for women at the time, Academic of the Lincei: her rooms were frequented, among others, by Carducci, Mommsen, Gregorovius, D'Annunzio, Zola, Liszt.
If you want to know more, you can talk to VERONICA RISMONDO.