Raffaella Carrà, megavilla in Tuscany for sale (with heliport)

After Rome, the Argentario. The last one super villa of Raffaella Carrà ends up on the market, after the apartment in Rome, in the Vigna Clara district, was also put up for sale for the sum of 2,100.00 euros. This round lacks information on the price, which will be discussed privately, but what we know about the Raffaella’s Tuscan villa It’s still breathtaking. Between infinity pool, private helipad, the refined hand of a well-known sculptor and the use of local stone, here are all the details and curiosities about thelast real estate heirloom of the Italian TV diva.

Raffaella Carrà, the villa in Argentario by Giò Pomodoro for sale

It will cost a lot, a lot. But the price remains top secret. There super villa of the diva Carrà is officially on sale from today: everyone can make their offer, and the luckiest (or lucky one) will earn a screaming still but also a piece of history of our television. The residence is located in the Grosseto Maremma, Argentario area in short, and it has an incredible view of Porto Santo Stefano. It covers a total of 1162 square meters (interior) and approximately 6 hectares of land exterior, with gardens, vineyards and olive groves.

But the “gem” of the villa is something else. A completely private heliport, in case you need to land your helicopter safely (and who doesn’t need it, every now and then). Then there is a space where it will soon arise a riding school beautiful, plus one infinity pool currently nearing completion. “The main villa is spread over 3 levels”, we read on the real estate agency’s website, “unique for its building type, it is built in local stone with powerful walls, which give a feeling of well-being and security. From an artistic point of view, the organization of the spaces responds to the conception of the building as an optical-sculptural boxwhich on the one hand collects natural light from the windows, conveying it inside in a different way depending on the seasons and the different hours of the day, on the other shapes the light itself through its projection onto the sculptural elements which become decorative, coming alive and transforming thanks to them play of shadows and lights”.

The key word of Villa della Carrà is therefore “sculpture”. Yes, because it was built in the 1980s by the artist Giò Pomodoro, internationally renowned abstract sculptor. For this reason, Raffaella’s house is a direct reflection of the artist’s personality, “with a unique imprint marked by the materials used: cement mortar, squared stones, iron, plaster, marble expertly combined and shaped to form a combination of art and mystery”. You enter from a wide driveway, which then follows a picturesque path between lavender plants and magnificent olive trees. Once inside, we find a living room with fireplacekitchen and pantry, well seven bedrooms (each with its own bathroom) and a relaxation room and obviously an indescribable view of the Grosseto sea. Plus, two cellars in the basement.

And there is too a second smaller villa, inside the former property of Raffaella Carrà. It is developed on two floors, has 236 square meters of floor space, and has three bedrooms with three bathrooms. Then the living room, also with a fireplace. Finally there is the annex, perched right on the hill overlooking the area. From here you can see the Tyrrhenian Sea without limits and borders, resting blissfully in the two bedrooms (equipped with bathrooms, of course). In short, it is a dream “buen retiro”., the one that Raffaella now passes on to a lucky buyer. Because for sure, this super Tuscan villa will not last long on the real estate market. There is the attractiveness of the place, the natural beauty, but above all the memory of Carrà, which he once walked those corridors stone. She would sit, perhaps in the garden, admiring the marina that shimmers at sunset. And sipping a drink, why not. For her the dream was reality. For some it will become so.

 
For Latest Updates Follow us on Google News
 

PREV “Let’s talk to her about the future” – DiLei
NEXT “I am an innkeeper, I chat with customers, I welcome them. I try to earn a pension for my old age”: the new life of Raffaello Tonon