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Price from: 000€/day – 000€/day
Casa Kasima in popular Calahonda between Málaga and Marbella is the place for large family gatherings, whether you want to gather several generations or take two or more families of friends on holiday together. Five bedrooms (originally six) with good sleeping places for fifteen people and four beautiful bathrooms provide room for large groups in a house where both floors can function as independent apartments with full-fledged kitchens and spacious living areas on both floors, furnished in Scandinavian style, where large window surfaces provides bright rooms and sea views from the top floor. In the garden there is a large swimming pool (4.5 m x 9 m plus stairs), a separate sauna with shower and large tiled areas for sunbathing and resting in sunbeds, deckchairs and a large hammock. On the lawn you can play badminton, croquet or billiards, and under the terrace there are darts and a table tennis table, so the garden area offers plenty of opportunities for joint activities. Externally, with a simple adaptation, there is stair-free access from the upper to the lower level, so that Casa Kasima fits well whether you have a pram or just have difficulty climbing stairs. The house is not fully adapted for wheelchair users, for example there are only 60 cm doors to the bathrooms, but if this is acceptable, the house can be rented out to families with a wheelchair user. Calahonda as a nearby area Calahonda is one of the most popular areas on the Sunshine Coast for Norwegians, located between the holiday towns of Marbella and Fuengirola. Casa Kasima is located a few meters from the 18-hole Cabopino Golf course, and it is a 15-20 minute walk down to Cabopino beach and the idyllic Cabopino harbor with yachts and restaurants and the protected sand dunes at Artola with beautiful footpaths built between the dunes. From the western end of Cabopino beach, the popular promenade runs towards Calahonda beach and on to La Cala de Mijas. From Casa Kasima there are also good hiking opportunities in the terrain around the golf course or up into the mountains. The Norwegian Seamen’s Church is half an hour’s walk away, there are a number of places to eat close to the Seamen’s Church. The Costa del Sol and the rest of Andalusia The Solkysten has earned its name with 320 annual sunny days, but also offers plenty of activity opportunities. For families with children, there are a number of options in the form of water parks, zoos and the like. Málaga city has become the city of museums with around thirty museums that will attract those interested in culture, where the Picasso Museum, the cathedral, the Roman amphitheater, the Arab castle and castle and excavated Phoenician buildings are just some of the attractions. If you travel a little inland from the coast, you will find dozens of white towns (pueblos blancos), of which Ronda, Mijas Pueblo and Frigilliana are among the most famous. Antequera is located up in the mountains behind Málaga and offers 2-3,000-year-old burial sites as well as a great castle and fortress complex, and with a wolf park and the unique mountain area of El Torcal nearby. Europe’s biggest tourist attraction is only two hours away by car, it is the Alhambra palace complex in Granada, and Córdoba which has a total of four world heritage attractions with the magnificent Mesquita (mosque cathedral) as the most famous, or Seville with the world’s largest Gothic cathedral. For families with children, a trip to Gibraltar will be high on the wish list with Europe’s only wild monkeys and exciting stalactite caves up in the Rock of Gibraltar and a small piece of British society in the city with typical English pubs and Marks & Spencer along the main street.
