Location: Coín, Spain
VILLAGE HOUSE WITH A LARGE TERRACE.
Townhouse located on a pedestrian street in the old town of Coín. South oriented, it is a very bright and cosy house.
The house is distributed over two floors as follows.
Ground floor: entrance hall with a small room/office on the left followed by the living room/dining room. From here a corridor leads to the kitchen, bathroom with shower and continues to the terrace. The large terrace is distributed over two levels. It offers a covered area with a laundry room and above this is a solarium where you can enjoy beautiful views towards the countryside and the village rooftops.
First floor: a flight of stairs from the living room leads to this level. There are 3 bedrooms.
The property is in good condition but requires some modernisation.
ABOUT COIN
The vibrant town of Coin is a beauty with plenty of history and sights. As you arrive, you will drive through fields of orchards, oranges, lemons, olives, almonds and forests such as Alpujata, La Fuente, El Charco del Infierno and La Albuquera. You will feel a world away from civilisation and indeed Coín is referred to as the town of three hundred orchards.
Coín has a rich history having been occupied by the Romans, when the town was known as Lacibis, then later as La Cobin, in the 1st century B.C.
There are many lovely squares, known as Plazas, where you can relax with a coffee, listen to the fountains and watch the world go by. Try Plaza de la Via or Plaza Alameda.
When occupied by the Moors, Coín was known as Dacuan and was an important town in the region. Although Coín's economy has largely relied on agriculture, it also has been a producer of marble and ceramics, perhaps you have heard the term ‘green Coín'?
Coin is located 36km south-west of Málaga, at an altitude of 210 metres above sea level overlooking the stunning Guadalhorce Valle. The climate has mild winters and hot summers and more than a third of the days of the year are sunny. Its municipality has an area of 128.4 km2 and welcomes its almost 22,000 inhabitants, who receive the name of coineños or coínos