SANT'ANTONIO DI MAVIGNOLA - In a quiet residential area, just a few minutes from Madonna di Campiglio and Pinzolo, we offer a detached house with a private garden of 350 square metres. The house is on one level on the mezzanine floor, accessed by an external staircase, and comprises an entrance hall, living area with kitchenette, corridor, two bedrooms and a bathroom with window. Between the flat and the roof there is an attic currently accessible only by a trapdoor in the ceiling of the corridor. The garage can be accessed both from the outside via a driveway and from the hallway of the house. The house is very bright and enjoys a splendid view of the Brenta Dolomites and Monte Carè Alto and Vedretta di Lares. The property offers good opportunities for enhancement, perfect for those who want to renovate and personalise the spaces according to their own style. Ideal both as a primary residence with the possibility of increasing the volume and as a holiday home.
A hamlet in the municipality of Pinzolo, S. Antonio di Mavignola lies on a hill formed by a mass of morainic debris dating back to post-glacial times. Its population was once mainly made up of farming families from Pinzolo, who brought their livestock to these pastures in summer before reaching the mountain pastures at higher altitudes. It seems that the first settlement was in Milegna, where today you can admire ancient farmsteads and buildings dedicated to alpine farming. Points of interest include the Church of Sant'Antonio Abate, built before 1300 and located on the road to Madonna di Campiglio, which for many years was entrusted to the care of a hermit. The church has a gabled roof covered with larch shingles and boasts rich decorations both inside and outside, attributed to Simone II Baschenis, created in 1540. Outside, on the façade, among the various brightly coloured depictions, the Deposition of Christ with the Virgin and the saints most dear to the valley stands out; Fort Clemp - the construction of the fortified barracks of Clemp, built between 1914 and 1915 with large granite blocks and reinforced concrete elements, was about forty metres long, divided into two floors which housed the rooms for the troops, the ammunition and food depot, the water tank, as well as the rooms used for the defence of the building. On the side facing the ‘enemy’ downstream, there were several rifle embrasures, and during the Austro-Hungarian Empire it was part of a larger defensive system consisting of additional trenches, barracks, rifle embrasures and caves. The fort and its garrison never took an active part in the war and after the armistice, the fort was decommissioned and abandoned. Masi di Pimunt and Fogajard, indicative of the typical economies of the past, are the rural settlements of Pimunt and Fogajard, perfectly preserved and revived in various ways, without distorting their architecture.