The apartment comprises a large entrance room / living room with kitchenette, one bedroom, one bathroom, veranda and courtyard (partially paved).
Nearest Airport | OLBIA COSTA SMERALDA | 15 km |
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Nearest Ferry | OLBIA FERRY PORT | 12 km |
Nearest Restaurant | LA LOGGIA | 50 meters |
Aeroporto Olbia Costa Smeralda 18 Km
Olbia-Porto 15 Km
Golfo Aranci -Porto 15 Km
Porto Cervo 26 Km
Porto Rotondo centro 500 m
The Port
Open one of the most beautiful stretches of the coast of Sardinia offers a structure technically perfect. And 'awarded by the Blue Flag of Europe that qualifies ports cleaner and better equipped at European level (quality of the landing, services and security measures, environmental education and information). It offers a safe haven for more than 650 boats.
Sardinia (pron.: /s?r?d?ni?/, Italian: Sardegna [sar?de??a], Sardinian: Sardigna [sar?dinja]) is the second largest island in the Mediterranean Sea (after Sicily and before Cyprus) and an autonomous region of Italy. The nearest land masses are (clockwise from north) the island of Corsica, the Italian Peninsula, Sicily, Tunisia and the Balearic Islands.
Sardinia is the second largest island in the Mediterranean Sea, with an area of 23,821 km². It is situated between 38° 51' and 41° 15' latitude north and 8° 8' and 9° 50' east longitude. To the west of Sardinia is the Sea of Sardinia, a unit of the Mediterranean Sea; to Sardinia's east is the Tyrrhenian Sea, which is also an element of the Mediterranean Sea.[5]
The coasts of Sardinia (1,849 km long) are generally high and rocky, with long, relatively straight stretches of coastline, many outstanding headlands, a few wide, deep bays, rias, many inlets and with various smaller islands off the coast.
The island has an ancient geoformation and, unlike Sicily and the mainland of Italy, is not earthquake-prone. Its rocks date from the Palaeozoic Era (up to 500 million years old). Due to long erosion processes the island's highlands, formed of granite, schist, trachyte, basalt (called "jaras" or "gollei"), sandstone and dolomite limestone (called tonneri or "heels"), average at between 300 to 1,000 metres. The highest peak is Punta La Marmora (1,834 m), part of the Gennargentu Ranges in the centre of the island. Other mountain chains are Monte Limbara (1,362 m) in the northeast, the Chain of Marghine and Goceano (1,259 m) running crosswise for 40 km (25 mi) towards the north, the Monte Albo (1057 metres), the Sette Fratelli Range in the southeast, and the Sulcis Mountains and the Monte Linas (1236 metres). The island's ranges and plateaux are separated by wide alluvial valleys and flatlands, the main ones being the Campidano in the southwest between Oristano and Cagliari and the Nurra in the northwest.
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