This description has been translated automatically by Google Translate and may not be accurate
reference: EK-93675350
VALSESIA - Scopa (VC), Strada Provinciale di Alagna n. 127 we sell in a new building with about 400 square meters of outdoor green, apartment on the second and last floor, 52 sqm, composed of: entrance in the living room, separate kitchen, bedroom, bathroom with window. Complete the property balcony and cellar. The estimate of work to complete the interior (electrical, plumbing and tiling) is € 9,000. In the building there are 4 other units available. Possibility of outdoor parking. Ideal for vacation home given the proximity to the ski slopes of Alagna Monte Rosa, and also for investment, given the demand for annual leases.
Asking price: Euro 90000.00
HISTORICAL DESCRIPTION It is a historic building that dates back to 1700. On the road that leads to Alagna, there is a very old door ... If you cross this door you dive into a world full of history ... .... The first to live in this building was a citizen of Walser origin who, after having come down to Alagna, had decided to establish his home here. In front of the house, in fact, extended immense meadows that allowed the cultivation of fruits and vegetables. Mr. R. was an architect who often went to Paris for work. His descendants enlarged the property to offer the possibility to their children and their families to stay all together. The oldest part of the property is the one located above the doorway I mentioned earlier. The hallway, originally covered with grass, has been paved with cobblestones for countless years. Even horse-drawn carriages used to come here, when cars did not exist yet: it was a fixed stop for overnight stays and refreshments. In the house, in fact, there was a baker, while in the extension of the building, which still exists today, there were rooms, a ballroom, a tavern and, where there was now a vegetable garden, there was a bowling alley. Even the well, half of which is located inside the ground floor of the house, was the fulcrum of the families' lives: each of them happened to the well with ladles and buckets to draw water and it was still a way to get together to share moments of life. The various descendants carried out the typical jobs of the Valsesian people: the men were plasterers, plasterers, carpenters, cobblers and they often went to Lyon, Paris and Switzerland, much in demand for their skill and originality. The women stayed at home to care for their children and work in the fields.
If you want to know more, you can talk to Margherita Brustia.