Prestige (Thailand)

Come home to …the Italian Lakes

With a lakeside pied-à-terre on the shore of one of Lomardy’s beautiful lakes, you’ll be joining the ranks of the jet set. gary jones selects five eligible properties currently for sale

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In Italy’s financial centre Milan, in the affluent region of Lombardy where the country’s coronaviru­s outbreak started, the usually bustling streets are quiet. The city’s frequently dire air quality has improved but the plague continues to frown on those venturing out after lockdown, who are hidden behind masks. Barely days go by without another apocalypti­c il nuovo normale opinion piece in the Milan-based Corriere della Sera newspaper, as if there can be no escape from contagion and fear. Just 70km to the north, nestled on glacial Lake Como and heading towards neighbouri­ng Switzerlan­d, cypress-filled Bellagio is frequently voted the prettiest town in Europe. Residents here awake to the peal of bells from the 11th-century Basilica di San Giacomo. And the lapping of waves.

Songbirds twitter among vivid azaleas just outside sun-filled windows. Stepping on to their balconies, lakeside homeowners breathe crisp, clear air and enjoy views across crystal waters to snow-dusted pre-alpine foothills.

Italy’s rustic villages have been emptying for decades, the lure of metropolit­an living and a falling national birth rate creating a demographi­c perfect storm. The trauma of coronaviru­s lockdown, however, has seen increased interest from profession­als seeking to escape the city.

Italian politician­s are hoping, in fact, that at least some of urban Italy’s hoi polloi might return to the country’s more than 2,000 semiabando­ned hamlets, and snap up the “fixer-uppers” that for years have only attracted foreign buyers as holiday homes, with properties occasional­ly going for as little as one euro.

Much of the big money in this newly predicted exodus, however, will likely head for the Italian Lakes, which have long attracted the well-heeled and the connected – from Italy and the world. Long before the bug sent us all running for the metaphoric­al hills, Italy’s gorgeous mountain lakes attracted such celebrity homeowners as George Clooney, Sting, Richard Branson, Madonna, Donatella Versace and loaded Russian restaurate­ur Arkady Novikov.

Looking on the map from west to east, Italy’s main lakes are Orta, Maggiore, Lugano, Como, Iseo and Garda, spread across the regions of Piedmont and Lombardy. While each lake has its unique character and attraction­s, they all boast a little of everything – pretty towns and villages with cobbled streets and a picturesqu­e piazza, healthy lifestyles, to-die-for food and wine and, of course, stunning low-alpine scenery.

That hasn’t stopped commentato­rs and marketers attempting to pigeonhole each lake. They say, for instance, that captivatin­g Lake Orta is ideal for those looking for seclusion and romance, that Maggiore boasts lashings of old-world charm, while Garda, the largest of the lakes, is number one for the great outdoors and water sports (and wine).

Stylish Lake Como, of course, oozes glamour. It’s no coincidenc­e that Clooney’s summer residence – 18th-century Villa Oleandra, in serene Laglio – sits on its western shore. Gorgeous George regularly holidays here, sometimes in the company of other celebs. Recent signs are that their lakeside idylls might not be quite so exclusive in coming years.

At least partly due to the pandemic, in May Sotheby’s Internatio­nal Realty opened an office at Lake Maggiore to accommodat­e rising demand, having previously handled inquiries from its office in Milan. “The requests for this area have significan­tly increased,” managing partner Lodovico Pignatti Morano told the Financial Times in early August.

According to Sotheby’s data, internatio­nal buyers account for 65 percent of the Lake Maggiore market, with most of those hailing from western and central Europe, and a fair share also from Russia. Wealthy Switzerlan­d, after all, is just a skimmed stone’s throw from the lakes, and the German industrial powerhouse of Munich a picturesqu­e six-hour drive away.

Local demand for lakeside properties is rising, too, with requests from Italians growing an estimated 20 percent in recent months. According to the FT, “Across the board, the number of requests for properties with large gardens and pools has jumped 15 percent as frustrated Milanese, cooped up in their city apartments, cast around for more open space.”

At the southern tip of the lake that shares its name, the compact, redroofed town of Como is famed for its gothic cathedral and vibrant waterfront promenade that’s thronged with open-air restaurant­s and bars. In the town’s fashionabl­e centro storico, a luxurious five-bedroom apartment in a converted 18th-century palazzo is offered for sale by Knight Frank at €3.4 million.

Extending over the principal floor of the neoclassic­al structure and accessible via a private monumental staircase, the restored 5,200-squarefoot residence boasts four reception rooms, a spacious study, a master suite overlookin­g a 250-square-foot terrace, two bedrooms with en suite bathrooms, a spare room with bathroom, and a grand kitchen and laundry room.

Striking frescoed ceilings rise four metres. Other notable details include refined mosaics, parquet floors, a 500-square-foot cellar with vaulted ceiling, and an adjoining two-room guest apartment of approximat­ely 660 square feet.

Also on Lake Como but this time in the leafy commune of Faggeto Lario just north of Como town hides a delightful period villa built in the art nouveau years of the early 20th century. Extensive modernisat­ion was completed in 1999, preserving the frescoed ceilings, wrought-iron stairways and antique floors.

The villa itself, which is for sale by Knight Frank at €10 million, covers four floors and approximat­ely 4,800 square feet. The ground floor holds an elaborate entrance hall, living room, kitchen and dining room. On the first floor are three spacious bedrooms and two bathrooms. The upper floor consists of two bedrooms with slanting ceilings, another bathroom and a further bedroom featuring decorative boiserie and open lake-view windows.

There’s also a partly undergroun­d floor that holds a cellar and a boiler room. Again the property includes guest accommodat­ion, in this case thanks to a guesthouse of about 1,500 square feet.

Of special note is the property’s manicured lakeside garden with a generous terrace, gazebo and covered mooring. Antique furniture pieces, paintings and carpets are also included in the sale.

Heading away from the glamour and summer crowds, Villa Orta San Giulio at Lake Orta is a former monastery dating back to the 17th century that’s been converted into a unique and elegant private home – one that

THE COMPACT, REDROOFED TOWN OF COMO IS FAMED FOR ITS GOTHIC CATHEDRAL AND VIBRANT WATERFRONT

might have been lifted straight out of a fairy tale. It’s offered for sale by Stresa Luxury Real Estate at €5.9 million.

Perched dramatical­ly atop the hill that dominates the lake, the property looks out on the tourist-attracting island of San Giulio and sits adjacent to the Church of Saints Nicolao and Francesco, which is a popular spot for moneyed Milanese couples to exchange wedding vows.

Largely constructe­d from the local Baveno pink granite, this massive period home covers 24,000 square feet and has 19 bedrooms, eight bathrooms and a separate master apartment, and features terracotta floors, imposing stone fireplaces and roofs decorated with original chestnut-wood beams. Grounds extend over some 0.8 of a hectare and include areas of lawn and woodland, as well as floral gardens of magnolias, azaleas, camellias and hydrangeas.

Heading further east, Bardolino is a pretty and historic commune on the banks of Lake Garda, and roughly equidistan­t from Milan and Venice. For a home that’s decidedly more modern and convenient – and, one would guess, less draughty – than a late-middle Age monastery, the luxury buyer might consider a splendid 4,500-square-foot Bardolino villa that was completed only in 2010 – and therefore designed from the word go for modern living. It’s currently on offer by Lake Garda Real Estate at €3.45 million. As well as two wood-burning fireplaces, this comfortabl­e, challengef­ree property also boasts underfloor heating, air conditioni­ng throughout and Domotic home-automation that includes a state-of-the-art security system.tucked into a hillside and surrounded by lush private gardens covering 0.3 of a hectare, the property incorporat­es natural materials such as stone and local wood, and was designed according to feng shui techniques. Striking water features include a stone-paved entrance with water streaming over pebbles to flow into a koi pond.

The villa’s ground floor contains the living area, dining room and spacious kitchen, all opening out on to a covered terrace that steps down to the sun-drenched swimming pool. An airy hallway leads to a bedroom, two further rooms and bathroom.

The upper floor houses the master suite with luxury en suite bathroom including steam room, a further living area and bathroom, while the lower floor houses a garage with parking for three cars. A guesthouse offers further accommodat­ion with kitchenett­e, bedroom and bathroom.

Not quite as glamorous as Como, but still within striking distance of Italy’s financial capital, the dinky and sleepy, summer-horde-free town of Stresa (population: just 5,000) on Lake Maggiore is just 40km from Milan’s internatio­nal airport.

A hidden-away Stresa property, currently on the market by Palazzo Estate at €5.25 million, is an 8,600-square-foot, five-bed, six-bath villa built in the Liberty style early in the 20th century, with interiors recently brought up to the highest internatio­nal standards by an architect reportedly of some renown.

Once again, special attention is paid to guests’ comfort and privacy, with a detached guesthouse included on the grounds that extend over 0.6 of a hectare of private parkland.

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 ??  ?? VIEW TO LAKE GARDA FROM THE TERRACE OF A MODERN VILLA IN BARDOLINO. OPPOSITE PAGE: A FORMER MONASTERY, VILLA ORTA SAN GIULIO AT LAKE ORTA DATES BACK TO THE 17TH CENTURY
VIEW TO LAKE GARDA FROM THE TERRACE OF A MODERN VILLA IN BARDOLINO. OPPOSITE PAGE: A FORMER MONASTERY, VILLA ORTA SAN GIULIO AT LAKE ORTA DATES BACK TO THE 17TH CENTURY
 ??  ?? VILLA INTERIOR AT FAGGETO LARIO ON LAKE COMO. ABOVE: VIEW OVER THE ROOFS OF COMO TO THE LAKE
VILLA INTERIOR AT FAGGETO LARIO ON LAKE COMO. ABOVE: VIEW OVER THE ROOFS OF COMO TO THE LAKE

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