B&B La Vigna

“The city dweller who leaves Treviso through porta Santi Quaranta (Fourty Saints’ Gate) and walks a few kilometres northwards, will reach a pleasant village called Santa Bona, where he will find cheerful villas, fertile fields, well-cultivated gardens, amidst fountains and limpid streams.”
Life at La Vigna (“The Vineyard”) keeps flowing as it did in the past: silently, without shocks, sunk in the cheerful March of Treviso, a source of great wealth for the Venetian gentlemen who invested in the mainland the money they had accumulated through trade.
Located in a quiet courtyard, on the edge of tilled fields and close to the city walls, La Vigna, which is attached to a Venetian villa (renovated in compliance with the local architectural tradition and now protected by Superintendence of Architectonic Heritage of Venice), is absorbed in the fragile silence and in the sober reality of the countryside, unaffected by the urban transformations of Treviso. Roses climb timidly its faded-coloured façade. This used to be a land agent’s simple house, with stable, hay loft and carriage house, scarcely illuminated by a few lanterns.
The house consists of two rooms, accommodating up to five people, a bathroom reserved for guests, a breakfast and an entertainment room, a parking space, the porch and a big private garden.
La Vigna is the ideal place to have some restorative rest. It is a quiet place where nothing sparkles and you will find no confusion or symmetry. You will stop there “as if by instinct, like a traveller weary of the road choosing, almost without realizing, a place that offers a grassy seat, silence, water and cool shade”, in a warm and cosy atmosphere.
The temporary inhabitants of La Vigna will be conquered by its soothing charm inviting them to dream and to come back again.

submitted by ineffabile on December, 17 2011
tags: flash, italy, venice, photo
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