Seven hundred and two square metres. Three patios with fruit trees. Two hundred metres from Lake Cocibolca, on the street that defines old Granada.
Request the detailsThis is a house that has watched Granada become Granada. Its corredor opens onto three patios, its ceilings are caña and clay tile, its floors are the painted mosaic the city is known for.
It sits directly on La Calzada — the street most travellers walk first, the street the city decorates first, the street that ends at the lake. The doors of the house open onto its rhythm.
Granada is the oldest European-founded city on the American mainland still standing on its original site. It runs at the speed of the lake beside it. Mombacho volcano watches the south, the islets sit in front of you, and the streets are colour, courtyards, and shade.
The expat community is small, settled and welcoming — Canadians, Americans, Europeans who came for a winter and stayed for a life. English is widely spoken in the historic centre.
The cost of a long, comfortable day here is a fraction of what it costs anywhere comparable in the Caribbean. The hotels are full on weekends, the restaurants on La Calzada have lines at sunset, and the city still feels like itself.
The house we are offering you is not just real estate. It is a place to live well, slowly, in a city that has not lost its character.
"You don't buy a colonial house in Granada. You become its next caretaker."
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