Area-re is pleased to offer in the splendid setting of San Saba a bright apartment located on the fourth floor of an elegant building with lift. The property internally comprises an entrance hall, double living room, two bedrooms, kitchen and bathroom.
The property includes a comfortable cellar.
The central location, a few steps from the subway and the main services, making the proposal even more interesting.
Cl. And 127 kwh/m2 year www. area-re.it www.facebook.com/areaprati www.twitter.com/areapratI
Euro 390,000
The property can be visited by appointment.
For any further information please contact our store at n°06.90233956-06.90233950, our consultants will be at your complete disposal.
San Saba, popularly known as the little Aventine, is the twenty-first district of Rome, takes its name from the monastery and its church which were its only inhabited presence for centuries after the fall of the empire .
Around the 7th century some hermits settled on the ruins of what had been the barracks (statio) of the 4th cohort of vigiles, conveniently located in a place from which a large part of the south-eastern territory of the city could be dominated by sight , between the current Porta San Paolo - which for the Romans was Porta Ostiensis - and Porta San Sebastiano - which for the Romans was the Porta Appia.
Towards the 8th century, oriental monks coming from the community founded in Jerusalem by San Saba took possession of the site, and they established a monastery which in the 9th century was considered the most important in the city, and from which a lively diplomatic activity towards Constantinople and the barbarian world radiated in these centuries.
Today the district is crossed by climbs and stairways that slope down towards the walls or towards Testaccio below. Of particular architectural interest are the "council" houses, semi-detached villas each with its own small garden, and buildings of no more than 4 floors, with bright apartments and spacious courtyards, each covered with a curtain of bricks of the same color as the ancient curtain of the church and the walls.