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Property ID : 1994

Sale 3.950.000€ - Palace, Shop
2970 Print

Property for sale: Bergamo centre

In the center of Bergamo next to the urban police offices, Palazzo da cielo a terra from the 1800s completely renovated. Furnished apartments rented with a 5% annual income. Important internal courtyard, basement garage for 60 cars. Shops with large windows of 400 m2. Total m2 2,970 € 3,950,000

information about Bergamo

Mostly ignored by travelers who favor nearby Milan, Bergamo is one of the most beautiful hill cities, while Piazza Vecchia is one of the most loved in Italy.” These are the words with which the English newspaper “The Telgraph” reviews Bergamo in its online version dedicated to travel, placing it among the 22 European cities “that you would never have thought of visiting but which you should definitely do instead”. Bergamo is the second of the cities mentioned after Gdansk in Poland. In the 22 there are two other Italian cities: Treviso and Trieste. Then there are Tbilisi, Skopje in Macedonia, Nantes in France, Maribor in Slavenia, Wraclow in Poland and Braga in Portugal.

The city is crossed by the A4 motorway, which connects it to Milan and Brescia.

Bergamo is surrounded on three sides (west, south, and east) by a system of tangential roads, connected to the highway, from which provincial and state roads lead to the valleys and to the capitals of neighboring provinces. The main communication route between Val Brembana, the Orobic capital and the eastern sector of the province is the Southern Ring Road of Bergamo.

The Rondò delle Valli, another name for Largo Decorati al Valor Civile, is an important roundabout in the city’s road system. Located to the north-east, it connects the state and provincial roads of the Seriana and Brembana valleys with the ring road that runs south of the capital, as well as with the city centre.

Bergamo is served by the Bergamo-Orio al Serio airport, from which there are frequent connections to numerous cities in Italy and Europe, and which represents Milan’s second airport hub.

The built-up area of Bergamo is divided into two distinct parts: the “Upper City,” surrounded by walls and set at a higher altitude, and the “Lower City,” which-although it too is of ancient origin and retains its historic cores-has been made partly more modern by some urbanization.

The Venetian walls of Bergamo were declared a World Heritage Site on 10 July 2017, during the 41st session of the UNESCO Committee in Krakow, Poland.

http://fiaip.it

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