Description
The entrance is quiet — the kind of quiet that carries over from the hillside itself.
Above the rooftops of La Heredia, the light shifts westward across the upper landing of this 312-square-metre townhouse, catching on natural plaster walls and the soft grain of oak flooring.
From this level, it’s just a few steps into the master suite, where the bedroom sits slightly withdrawn from the corridor, its layout unforced.
There’s space where there needs to be, and restraint where there doesn’t.
The adjoining bathroom draws in morning light from the south, and behind the door, the dressing area is arranged with domestic rhythm in mind, not drama.
A second en-suite guest room shares the same level, each separated to maintain quiet.
Downstairs, the house opens.
The central living and dining space is configured around a fireplace that feels original, or at least convincing in its intent.
The kitchen sits in an L to the left — gas cooking, Bosch and Liebherr appliances integrated into a design that prefers natural textures over gloss.
The surfaces aren’t pristine; they’re tactile. Doors slide open onto a terrace without announcement.
There’s no architectural punctuation — just a shift in temperature and the scent of the garden.
Beyond that, the 179 m² plot unfolds slowly.
Sea views appear through the terrace balustrade when you least expect them.
There’s a storage space just off to the right.