High ceilings and glass doors that blur the line between inside and out. The living room opens to the terrace in a single gesture — sea, mountains, and golf course arranged in layers like a painting you didn't commission but can't stop looking at.
A kitchen designed for people who actually cook. A dining room that seats eight without anyone raising their voice. And the kind of afternoon light that moves through the house like a slow conversation.
Four bedrooms, each with fitted wardrobes and the kind of linen that doesn't advertise itself. The master suite opens to its own views — sea on one side, mountains on the other. Every bathroom finished to a standard that makes the morning feel unhurried.
En-suite bathroom. Panoramic views. The room where you realise you don't want to leave the villa today.
Three additional bedrooms, each with natural light and its own character. All with fitted wardrobes.
Cinema and games room. Gym and yoga space. Wine cellar. The floor designed for the hours after sunset.
A thousand square metres of landscaped grounds. The pool sits at the centre — morning laps with the mountains watching. Jacuzzi for the evenings. Multiple terraces, covered and open, arranged around the garden like rooms without walls.
The sauna is downstairs. The wine cellar is next to it. Nobody planned that combination, but it works.
Los Naranjos is at the doorstep. Aloha, Las Brisas, La Quinta — all within ten minutes. Tee times arranged.
Puerto Banus five minutes by car. Marbella centre fifteen. The kind of restaurants where the waiter remembers your name by night two.
Private chef. Yacht charter. Airport transfers. Certified childcare. Whatever the week requires — arranged personally.