Luxury 2-bedroom apartment for investment, with a contemporary design, in a prime location at the Hyatt Regency, in Junqueira, Lisbon. A perfect apartment for enjoying the history, culture and gastronomy of Lisbon. The photos are from the floor model.
The Hyatt Regency Lisbon has a total of 108 tourist apartments and 34 suites, with large balconies overlooking the River Tagus. In addition to its excellent location, within walking distance of a number of landmarks such as Belém Tower, Lx Factory and Jerónimos Monastery, the Hyatt Lisboa Residences also offer a bar, swimming pool and spa.
The apartment is sold fully furnished, equipped and decorated and has a total construction area of 108 sq m. The 113.44 gross private area includes a 46.44 sq m balcony, two bedrooms with a private bathroom and an American-style kitchen.
Features:
– Ideal for investment
– Wood flooring
– Fitted kitchen
– Recessed lighting
– Balcony
– Lift
– Garden
– Parking
– Spa
– Swimming pool
As part of the luxury hotel chain brand, the Hyatt Group is in charge of managing the development, which has a guaranteed return on investment and is available for the owner to use 4 weeks a year.
Sitting on the edge of the Tagus, Alcântara covers an area of 4.39 km2 and has a population of 13,911. The parish was created on 8 April 1770, when it was called São Pedro in Alcântara due to the transfer to this area what was until then the parish of São Pedro in Alfama.
It is often associated with the Arabic word “Al-quantãrã”, “the bridge”, referring to the existence of a bridge over the river Alcântara, which has now disappeared.
Alcântara has hills and valleys, along with natural resources on the banks of the river and fertile land that allowed a rich and varied agriculture, with many vegetable gardens in the alluvial valleys, vineyards and cereals, and limestone quarries with lime kilns. It was these conditions that attracted people to settle here during the Muslim occupation, albeit spread apart. It was in the 18th century that Alcântara began to urbanise, coinciding with the creation of the parish.
The factory buildings from the late 19th century, which so marked the neighbourhood in the first decades of the 20th century, have since been abandoned. The industrialisation of Alcântara in the 2nd half of the 19th century gave way, a hundred years later, to the inverse process and a profound social transformation, and most of the properties today are residential and commercial buildings.
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