introducing casa poeta - andalucia-unoandaluciauno.com/downloads/casa poeta brochure...

7
1 INTRODUCING CASA POETA Casa Poeta is a traditional Spanish village farmhouse, extensively remodelled and modernised. It is located in the midst of the magic triangle of ancient Moorish cities: Córdoba, Granada and Seville. The house sleeps 8 in four bedrooms (two with double, two with twin beds), all with bathrooms en-suite. The house has a fully-equipped kitchen, a laundry-room, sitting-room with wood-burning stove and a study/dining-room. In the garden there is a terrace with awning and a fully private 8m x 4m pool, a shaded open-air eating area with BBQ and a small additional summer kitchen; there is also a separate sun-terrace and a wood-fired bread oven. Indoors you will find a large library and extensive art-collection, and WI-FI on all floors. Casa Poeta (the Old House) is an ancient Andalusian finca, a village farmhouse with its own more modern separate guest tower (seen on left above) set in a cluster of courtyard gardens where orange and lemon trees glow between scarlet sevillana roses, sky-blue plumbago, clouds of purple bougainvillea, and abundant banks of rosemary, thyme, bay, mint and basil. In late summer the evenings are fragrant with jasmine and the langorous scent of dama de noche. Not so long ago, at the end of the day, farm animals used to be led in through the double front door to the stables in the back yard. In those days the upper floor with its typically low roof served as a granary a safe haven for grain from hungry Hispanic rodents. There was a midden where the roses grow vigorously now.

Upload: others

Post on 12-Feb-2021

1 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

  • 1

    INTRODUCING CASA POETA

    Casa Poeta is a traditional Spanish village farmhouse, extensively remodelled and modernised. It is

    located in the midst of the magic triangle of ancient Moorish cities: Córdoba, Granada and Seville.

    The house sleeps 8 in four bedrooms (two with double, two with twin beds), all with bathrooms

    en-suite. The house has a fully-equipped kitchen, a laundry-room, sitting-room with wood-burning

    stove and a study/dining-room. In the garden there is a terrace with awning and a fully private

    8m x 4m pool, a shaded open-air eating area with BBQ and a small additional summer kitchen;

    there is also a separate sun-terrace and a wood-fired bread oven. Indoors you will find a large

    library and extensive art-collection, and WI-FI on all floors.

    Casa Poeta (the Old House) is an ancient Andalusian finca, a village farmhouse with its own more

    modern separate guest tower (seen on left above) set in a cluster of courtyard gardens where

    orange and lemon trees glow between scarlet sevillana roses, sky-blue plumbago, clouds of

    purple bougainvillea, and abundant banks of rosemary, thyme, bay, mint and basil. In late

    summer the evenings are fragrant with jasmine and the langorous scent of dama de noche.

    Not so long ago, at the end of the day, farm animals used to be led in through the double front

    door to the stables in the back yard. In those days the upper floor with its typically low roof served

    as a granary – a safe haven for grain from hungry Hispanic rodents. There was a midden where

    the roses grow vigorously now.

  • 2

    The Main House at Casa Poeta is the old finca itself, with the roof raised to make two double

    bedrooms upstairs, sharing a bathroom through separate doors. Downstairs is a fully modernised

    kitchen with fan oven, gas hob, fridge-freezer and a dishwasher. A capacious store-room serves

    the kitchen.

    An arch leads through from kitchen to sitting-room, with its wood-burning Jøtul stove for winter

    evenings. Through another arch is the study, which also doubles as a dining-room during the two

    or three months of the year when the evenings are too chilly for dining outside.

  • 3

    The house is decorated throughout with the gloriously vivid photographs of local Andalusian life

    by my late wife Fay Tresilian and my own eclectic collection of 20th century art. (* see note below)

    Returning downstairs, French windows lead out onto a patio with a Moroccan tiled table and

    awning in the green and silver stripes of Andalucia.

  • 4

    Across the courtyard in the lower garden lies the pool-house, a former cow-shed now

    immaculately rebuilt to hold the filtration machinery for the pool and a fully-equipped laundry.

    The 8 x 4 m swimming pool itself is the centrepiece of the upper courtyard garden, with its

    covered outdoor eating area and sun-terrace.

    The Guest Tower also stands here: two double-bedded rooms, both en-suite with shower-room

    and w.c., the lower room in an authentic Moroccan blue giving directly onto the pool, the upper

    room a rich Moroccan orange with lovely views across the valley to the village of La Chica Carlota

    beyond.

    The Tower also has its own small summer kitchen and a separate poolside w.c. Across the pool,

    beyond the covered terrace, is the pride of Casa Poeta, the clay bread oven, wood-fired and ideal

    for pizzas, bread-making and summer roasts.

  • 5

  • 6

    Floor Plans

  • 7

    Casa Poeta in History

    When the Christians under Ferdinand and Isabella conquered the last of the Moorish strongholds,

    the province of Granada in 1492, the ‘reyes catolicos’ immediately went back on their promises of

    religious tolerance and banished Jews and the remaining Moors from Andalusia. This left the

    province without all its most capable intellectuals, bankers, farmers and artisans. Over the

    following centuries Andalusia – once the garden of Spain – gradually degenerated into bandit

    country. It was stop this slide into chaos that Andalusia was ‘re-colonised’ in the 18th century, by

    the building of garrison towns at 25km intervals along the main road from Seville to Cordoba, and

    their repopulation by surplus citizenry from North Germany. Our nearby La Carlota was one of

    those towns. Las Pinedas was one of the outlying villages cloned from it: the same basic layout of

    two parallel streets with a square and a church on its southern side, albeit on a smaller scale. Casa

    Poeta, on the South-Eastern corner of the village is one of the original houses of that ancient

    street-plan.

    About the Owner

    Nicholas Tresilian is an art-historian and broadcaster, one of the founders of Classic fm and a

    leading presenter for many years. He spends the winters in Oxford and the summers at Casa

    Poeta, where his office-library is off the lower garden. He also travels a lot, and this then frees up

    Casa Poeta for rental.