
8

4

4

280 m²

Private pool

Florence: 150 km

cultural sightseeing, winemaking area, spas, excellent food, beautiful hiking, wild nature

Siena, Florence, Montalcino, Montepulciano, Pienza, Orvieta, Cortona
Overview
Villa Montecucco is located at an altitude of 400 metres above sea level, twenty minutes’ drive from the castle estate of Vivo D’Orcia. It benefits from absolute privacy, but has access to all of the conveniences that the Vivo D’Orcia estate affords. The sprawling estate of Vivo D’Orcia takes its name from the majestic Val D’Orcia region in which it is found.
This beautiful valley is a nature preserve located in the southernmost part of Tuscany with magnificent views 360 degrees around. Shimmering olive groves, stone paths dotted with cypress trees, endless vineyards and centuries-old chestnut trees surround the immediate vicinity, and the nearby villages of Colle Sant’Angelo and Montalcino can be seen from the property’s altitude.
The large living room with open fireplace lies on the first floor of the house and leads onto 3 of the 4 bedrooms. Each bedroom has its own private bathroom. The decoration of the house is full of taste; mostly using textiles from a Tuscan weavery located near Arezzo. In front of the kitchen door a vine-covered pergola with table and chairs for outdoor meals looks out over the wide and open valley.
The pool measures 4x15 meters and is equipped with deck chairs and sun beds. An outdoor shower, as well as a pergola for shade will make this area the centre of your outdoor life.
The gentleman farmer and owner of the house, Alessandro Tognozzi, will be welcoming you personally.
Service available
Services:
- Cook
- Household on demand
- Welcome dinner
- First shopping
- Baby equipment
For a detailed description of each service,
click here
Facilities:
- Hifi stereo
- Pool
- Fireplace
- TV
- Parking Private parking
Floorplan of the villa
Ground floor
Living kitchen with French windows onto front of house and the garden with pergola
Family room with TV, comfortable sofas, table for games
Double bedroom with en-suite bathroom
First floor
Loggia
Large living room with fireplace
1 double bedroom with en-suite bathroom
2 twin bedrooms with en-suite bathrooms
garden :Landscaped garden with oak trees, lavender, roses, broom, rosemary and sage
Wine covered pergola with table and chairs for outdoor meals
Pool 4x15 meters, 1,40 meters deep with second pergola for shade
Outdoor shower
Guest reviews
Thanks a lot for your advice and help on these vacations, our stay in Montecucco was marvellous. The house fully met our expectations as well as the service provided on site by the lovely owner Alessandro.
We will stay in touch,
Kind regards
Baptiste, France, August 2008
Dear Alessandro, we had a terrific time in your beautiful house and your beautiful country. A great way to explore Tuscany, all of this made our family gathering very special. We had many fun moments by the pool, cooking food and exploring the local wines ( a lot ) . If the kitchen table could speak it would tell tales (but we are glad it can’t).
Elisabeth & Franz, Cyprus, Linde & Julian, Germany, Franzisca & Shona, UK, Julia & Alek, Berlin - May 2008
Dear Alessandro, thank you for a great week in this lovely villa! It’s a perfect location to explore Southern Tuscany. Some lovely walking through the trees down towards the river. We recommend the following restaurant: Il Leccio in Sant Angelo, Ristorante degli Archi in San Quirico and I Lecci.
Jon & Helen, UK - June 2008
„Montecucco“ must be a Tuscan for „GEM“!! It was the perfect base to explore Toscana! Alessandro is the epitome of a country gentleman and Lillianna a Tuscan chef! We had dinner every night ( when we weren’t out ) under our wine covered pergola and enjoyed the view! The pool has the MOST marvelous view and lazing under the Tuscan sun by it was heaven. We have has the most marvelous holiday along with our Milanese friends. We look forward to returning one day! Highlights ? There are too many to mention!
David B., Perth, Western Australia - July 2008
I have had a great time here. My favourite bit of the holiday was swimming the length of the pool underwater. Thank you for letting me stay here.
Charles, age 9, August 2008
Dear Alessandro, Thank you very much for your hospitality! We all loved our time at Montecucco, the villa is amazing and we would all love to return one day ( and also visit you in Vivo d’Orcia to share your wine ). Six of us will return to Melbourne and two go back to London...It was a fantastic place for a group of friends to be reunited for a week. Thanks, once again!
Sophie, Mark, Jenny, Ken, Fiona, Amy, Tabhita and Sally - October 2008
Rates
Beds> | Low season | Mid season | Mid season 2 | High season |
| 8 | 1990€ | 2670€ | - | 3150€ |
* Low season : 01 January 2010 - 27 March 2010, 06 November 2010 - 31 December 2010
* Mid season : 27 March 2010 - 03 July 2010, 28 August 2010 - 06 November 2010
* High season : 03 July 2010 - 28 August 2010
The Estate Vivo d'Orcia
Where Insiders meet
"Vivo d'Orcia is not a place, it is a way of life..." The Castle of Vivo d'Orcia lies in the widespread Orcia valley in southern Tuscany, 2 hours from Florence, 1 hour from Siena, close to such cultural jewels as Pienza, Montalcino and Montepulciano, to name but a few.
The hamlet Vivo D'Orcia lies at an altitude of 900 m above sea level. The particular combination of altitude and meditteranean climate creates an unusual whealth of flora and fauna. Many wild animals such as deer, wild boar and foxes as well as the most deliscious truffles call the Monte Amiata their home.
A pope's refuge: the estate with the impressive castle and the romanic chapel reaches back to the 11th century. The humble hermitage was transformed into a sophisticated and well-organised agricultural center when Cardinal Marcello Cervini, later Pope Marcello II, acquired the estate in 1534. The property is still owned by the family today. Count Marcello Cervini and his wife Amarilli spend most of the summer months in residence as attentive and interesting hosts. Incidentally, their castle was featured in the jan. 2005 issue of THE WORLD OF INTERIORS.
Century old chestnut trees cast thei shade in the gardens of the houses, ideal for al-fresco meals outdoors. Fresh fruit and tomatoes, spicy sausages, homemade pasta and polenta, mushrooms from the woods next door, truffles, and of course the precious local olive oils and wines.
Photographs of the Estate and the surroundings
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Map & Getting there
The village of Vivo d'Orcia, at less than one kilometer from the Estate offers excellent shopping facilites. You will find a small supermarket, a bar, a bank and a post office, as well as a typical trattoria specialised in the regional country fare.
- Abbadia San Salvatore 12 minutes
- Pienza 30 minutes
- Montalcino 30 minutes
- Montepulciano 40 minutes
- Orvieto 1 hour 15 minutes
- Siena 1 hour 20 minutes
- Florence 2 hours
- Rome 2 ½ hours
Activities & Places of interest
- Montepulciano is a graceful Tuscan hill town, best known for its Vino Nobile di Montepulciano, which was being praised by connoisseurs over 200 years ago and can certainly contend with Italy’s best today. The many churches and handsome palazzi, the steep cobbled alleys and vine-trailing stone bastions are essential viewing for anyone venturing south of Siena. On a clear day from the top of the town you have tremendous panoramic views across the countryside, stretching towards Assisi’s Monte Subasio, Monte Amiata, the Val d’Orcia, Pienza, and even the towers of Siena.
- Montalcino is beautifully situated on a hill inhabited since Etruscan times, swathed in vineyards and olive groves. It is a quiet, affluent, attractive town with pretty buildings and flower-filled squares, and many shops selling the Brunello di Montalcino.
- Pienza, the unfinished “utopian” city, was commissioned by Pope Pius II in 1459. In just three years the cathedral, the papal and bishop’s palaces and the central part of the town were completed, but the extensive project ended abruptly when Pius died only two years after the consacration of the cathedral.
- The Val d’Orcia is a wide valley south of Siena through which the old Via Francigena (the chief route linking Rome with the north) used to lead, passing castles and fortified towns, some of them dating back as far as the eighth century. In San Quirico make sure you see the Horti Leonini, an early Renaissance garden, as well as the western door in the city wall and the Collegiata (main church).
- Florence et Rome can be reached by train in one and a half hours from the nearby station Chiusi.
- Monte Oliveto Maggiore Two great treasures are housed in the abbey. Lining the main cloister is a fresco cycle of the life of St Benedict by Luca Signorelli and Il Sodoma. Less famous, less sensational, but perhaps of finer quality, are the wooden intarsia choir stalls by Fra’ Giovanni da Verona. It is home to a dozen monks who specialize in restoring old books, and make wine, honey and olive oil.
- Sant’Anna in Camprena is a rambling monastery on the road between Pienza and San Quirico d’Orcia. A very romantic setting which served as location for the film The English Patient. In the refectory there is a fresco by the renaissance painter Giovanni Antonio Bazzi, known as Il Sodoma.
- Sant’Antimo is surely one of the loveliest Romanesque buildings in all of Italy. It is hard to imagine a more sympathetic combination of architectural grace and natural setting. Originally founded by Charlemagne in 800, the abbey was once home to a prominent Benedictine community. Creamy stone bricks, luminous Volterran alabaster, playful carvings and frescoes of animals give it a peculiarly sunny air. A group of French Cistercian monks now runs the abbey, celebrating Mass with Gregorian chants several times a day.
- Tuscany is famous for its hot springs, belonging to a geothermical system that more or less encircles Monte Amiata, the most spectacular being Saturnia in the south west of the region. Close to Vivo d'Orcia is Bagno Vignoni which has been popular since Etruscan times. St Catherine of Siena is said to have appreciated its therapeutic qualities, as is Lorenzo the Magnificent, whose family built the splendid arcaded pool – a kind of flooded, bubbling piazza, famously used by Tarkovsky for some of the more surreal passages of his film Nostalgia. Bagni San Filippo may go into the books as the world’s smallest thermal spa – a telephone booth, a few old houses, an outdoor spring in the middle of the woods with glistening limestone formations, and one small hotel with a public pool.
- Fashion addicts can splurge out at the famous Prada factory outlet, which lies on to road to Florence.
Sports
- Many beautiful signposted walks can be made from Vivo d’Orcia. You will find more information in the houses.
Prepare your trip
Prepare your trip by downloading more info about the estate, the area, sights, shopping facilities, sports, beaches, restaurants and trattorias, wineries and literature references.
Download more info about the estate and the surroundings