The morning light in this part of Umbria does something you won't forget. It comes in low from the east, rolling over the valley in long gold sheets, and by the time you're standing at the first-floor kitchen window with an espresso, the hills between Città della Pieve and the Tuscan border are already glowing. No traffic noise. Just wind through the olives, and maybe a distant tractor. This is the pace of life this farmhouse has held for generations — and for the right buyer, it's the foundation of something remarkable.
Situated roughly 9.5 kilometres from the historic walled town of Città della Pieve, the property sits along an unpaved lane that keeps it genuinely private. That 1.5-kilometre approach road is not a drawback — it's a filter. It means your nearest neighbour isn't visible, your garden isn't overlooked, and the only sounds drifting through open windows on a June evening are cicadas. The views face predominantly east-south, sweeping across undulating farmland and wooded ridgelines that have changed very little in two hundred years.
The farmhouse itself is divided across two levels, totalling 117 square metres of residential space. The ground floor holds a generous 67-square-metre storage area — thick stone walls, original structural features, direct connection to the garden — that reads immediately as a future living room, studio, or open-plan kitchen-diner. The kind of space an architect gets excited about. Upstairs, a 50-square-metre apartment is already functioning: two bedrooms, a kitchen, a bathroom. It's simple, honest, nothing fancy — but it works as-is while renovation plans take shape, which matters enormously when you're managing a project from abroad.
The real story, though, is what surrounds t ... click here to read more