Overview
Reference GRB1091
Bedrooms: 6
Bathrooms: 5
Toilets: 1
Pool: Private
Floors: 2
Year of Construction: 1875
Furnished: Optional furnished
Covered:220m²
Plot:605m²
Uncovered veranda:10m²
Covered veranda:25m²
THIS PROPERTY IS NOW SUBJECT TO SALE CONTRACT: This magnificent farmhouse is situated at the edge of the village of Gharb with excellent country walks right from the front doorstep.
The wide welcoming entrance hall with traditional stone arches leads directly to a staircase to the the first floor. Turning to the left one enters a spacious multi-function room with arches giving access to all the ground floor rooms, which although separate give the feeling of an open plan home.
To the left is a dining room, which leads to a very large and spacious kitchen with a central island and breakfast bar. There is a comfortable flow as one can access the living room via the kitchen or the main central room.
The living room itself, which overlooks the ground floor central courtyard and outside pool terraces, is split into sections, a reading area, and a cosy TV area with sofas. At the far end is a separate snug facing the pool and outside terraces.
Off the central room there is a guest toilet. A large arched doorway opens into a private courtyard, off which is a ground floor en-suite bedroom and a store room which leads to a lovely covered seating area, currently used for outside dining. This in turn leads to a very large terrace, part of which is also covered with a further seating area. The perfect place for entertainment.
Steps lead up to a very large pool and surrounding terrace. At the far end of the pool there are further steps that lead up to a small elevated garden and another seating area.
The outside areas offer one of the best entertainment areas currently on the market in Gozo.
Back indoors, an internal staircase leads up to family bathroom half-way and on up to a wide traditional loggia, off which there are four bedrooms, two of which are en-suite. Two of them are currently used as an office and art studio respectively.
The massive en-suite master bedroom has a private terrace overlooking the pool and garden. Off the en-suite bathroom is yet another bedroom en-suite, currently used as a reading library. The bathroom fittings have currently been removed in order for the room to be used as a walk in closet but It can easily be reverted to a bathroom.
Off the main staircase, a further set of stairs lead up to a small washroom. This in turn leads to the roof from where one can enjoy country and sea views across the countryside to Gordan Lighthouse. On this roof there is a Solar hot water heater and also 12 Photo Voltaic (PV) Panels.
A delightful, spacious and comfortable home with great entertainment spaces.
GHARB:
Għarb is a particularly attractive and interesting village and one of Gozo’s oldest. Archaeological excavations have revealed the remains of Neolithic and Bronze Age settlements (not visible today). The Phoenicians were here followed by the Romans and Byzantines. The name L-Għarb, though, is Arabic, suggesting the establishment of an organised community here during Arab domination between 870 and 1090 AD.
Għarb is a traditional village. Its character is distinctly rural and until very recently it was populated almost exclusively by people who worked the surrounding fields in this fertile area of Gozo. They retained an old Maltese dialect, with a rich vocabulary of old words and pronunciations long since discarded by the rest of the population. The people of l-Għarb are also renowned craftsmen mostly famous for the manufacture of the unique “l-Għarb blade”, a traditional sharp knife popularly known as the “Sikkina ta’ l-Għarb”. Even today, L-Għarb is home to blacksmiths, locksmiths, cotton weavers and lace makers, carpenters, and masters in cane-work. Gharb is also known for producing able fishermen, while Għarb shepherds produce the best Gozo Cheese on the Island.
This makes it a very appropriate place for the l-Għarb Folklore Museum, which occupies a historic house in the heart of the village. The 28 rooms contain all sorts of curiosities linked with traditional trades, crafts, and daily life. The building that houses the museum was once home to Frenc Mercieca (1892-1967), popularly known as Frenc ta’ l-L-Għarb, a saintly ‘wise man’ who cured many people with a mix of medicinal herbs and prayer to Our Lady. He left doctors perplexed by his successes and his reputation spread rapidly throughout the Maltese Islands and even abroad.
Also open to visitors is the former home of another saintly resident, Karmni Grima, the woman who heard the voice of Our Lady at Ta’ Pinu and began the devotions that have turned it into Malta’s most important shrine. Ta’Pinu, today a large and important church, lies on the edge of Għarb and is well worth a visit. So too is the hill opposite which has a steep but pleasant path leading to the top, adorned with white marble statues of the stations of the cross.
Also close to Gharb is the Ta’ Dbiegi Crafts Village, where various handicrafts are made and sold. Visitors can watch craftspeople creating mouth-blown glass, Gozo lace, pottery, and filigree, and of course, purchase the results.
Historically, Gharb played an important role in safeguarding Malta. Gharb’s coastal lookouts were, for example, the first to signal the arrival from Sicily of reinforcements for the beleaguered Maltese under the Knights of St. John in the Great Siege of Malta in 1565. During that time of constant threat from the Ottoman Turks and marauding Berbers, the L-Għarb lookouts were crucial, sending smoke signals to Malta to warn of approaching peril.
L-Għarb is the second oldest village parish in Gozo, established in 1679. The old church, known today as “Taż-Żejt”, served as the parish church for fifty years. It is called ‘Taz-Zejt’ (zejt meaning oil) because of a legend that says that an old woman found oil oozing from the side of the church, spread it over her body, and was cured of her ills.
Today’s impressive Parish Church and Collegiate Basilica that dominates the pretty square at the heart of the village was built in 1699 and consecrated in 1729. It is dedicated to the Visit of Our Lady to her cousin St. Elizabeth, popularly known as the Feast of the Visitation. The feast day is on the 31st of May each year and the festa is held on the first weekend of July.
A short and pleasant walk out of the village towards the coastal cliffs is the tiny chapel of St.Demetrius. Legend has it that Turkish raiders once stole the young son of a local lady called Sgugina. After the poor mother wept her distress in front of the sacred altar painting of St Demetrius in the chapel, the story goes that the saint was seen riding his horse out of the painting, charging the Turks and returning Żgugina’s son safely to his mother.
The area around Gharb and St Demetrius’ Chapel is delightful for walking and enjoying the countryside. If you follow the little road along the Wied il-Mielaħ (valley) you will have a lovely meander through the fertile Gozitan countryside before reaching the sea and a dramatic natural rock ‘window’ very much less visited than the iconic Azure Window at Dwejra.
Alternatively, you could just sit peacefully in Gharb’s picturesque village square, admiring the view of the church and the unique hand-carved stone balconies that adorn the village’s oldest homes, and watching the Gozitan world go by.
The wide welcoming entrance hall with traditional stone arches leads directly to a staircase to the the first floor. Turning to the left one enters a spacious multi-function room with arches giving access to all the ground floor rooms, which although separate give the feeling of an open plan home.
To the left is a dining room, which leads to a very large and spacious kitchen with a central island and breakfast bar. There is a comfortable flow as one can access the living room via the kitchen or the main central room.
The living room itself, which overlooks the ground floor central courtyard and outside pool terraces, is split into sections, a reading area, and a cosy TV area with sofas. At the far end is a separate snug facing the pool and outside terraces.
Off the central room there is a guest toilet. A large arched doorway opens into a private courtyard, off which is a ground floor en-suite bedroom and a store room which leads to a lovely covered seating area, currently used for outside dining. This in turn leads to a very large terrace, part of which is also covered with a further seating area. The perfect place for entertainment.
Steps lead up to a very large pool and surrounding terrace. At the far end of the pool there are further steps that lead up to a small elevated garden and another seating area.
The outside areas offer one of the best entertainment areas currently on the market in Gozo.
Back indoors, an internal staircase leads up to family bathroom half-way and on up to a wide traditional loggia, off which there are four bedrooms, two of which are en-suite. Two of them are currently used as an office and art studio respectively.
The massive en-suite master bedroom has a private terrace overlooking the pool and garden. Off the en-suite bathroom is yet another bedroom en-suite, currently used as a reading library. The bathroom fittings have currently been removed in order for the room to be used as a walk in closet but It can easily be reverted to a bathroom.
Off the main staircase, a further set of stairs lead up to a small washroom. This in turn leads to the roof from where one can enjoy country and sea views across the countryside to Gordan Lighthouse. On this roof there is a Solar hot water heater and also 12 Photo Voltaic (PV) Panels.
A delightful, spacious and comfortable home with great entertainment spaces.
GHARB:
Għarb is a particularly attractive and interesting village and one of Gozo’s oldest. Archaeological excavations have revealed the remains of Neolithic and Bronze Age settlements (not visible today). The Phoenicians were here followed by the Romans and Byzantines. The name L-Għarb, though, is Arabic, suggesting the establishment of an organised community here during Arab domination between 870 and 1090 AD.
Għarb is a traditional village. Its character is distinctly rural and until very recently it was populated almost exclusively by people who worked the surrounding fields in this fertile area of Gozo. They retained an old Maltese dialect, with a rich vocabulary of old words and pronunciations long since discarded by the rest of the population. The people of l-Għarb are also renowned craftsmen mostly famous for the manufacture of the unique “l-Għarb blade”, a traditional sharp knife popularly known as the “Sikkina ta’ l-Għarb”. Even today, L-Għarb is home to blacksmiths, locksmiths, cotton weavers and lace makers, carpenters, and masters in cane-work. Gharb is also known for producing able fishermen, while Għarb shepherds produce the best Gozo Cheese on the Island.
This makes it a very appropriate place for the l-Għarb Folklore Museum, which occupies a historic house in the heart of the village. The 28 rooms contain all sorts of curiosities linked with traditional trades, crafts, and daily life. The building that houses the museum was once home to Frenc Mercieca (1892-1967), popularly known as Frenc ta’ l-L-Għarb, a saintly ‘wise man’ who cured many people with a mix of medicinal herbs and prayer to Our Lady. He left doctors perplexed by his successes and his reputation spread rapidly throughout the Maltese Islands and even abroad.
Also open to visitors is the former home of another saintly resident, Karmni Grima, the woman who heard the voice of Our Lady at Ta’ Pinu and began the devotions that have turned it into Malta’s most important shrine. Ta’Pinu, today a large and important church, lies on the edge of Għarb and is well worth a visit. So too is the hill opposite which has a steep but pleasant path leading to the top, adorned with white marble statues of the stations of the cross.
Also close to Gharb is the Ta’ Dbiegi Crafts Village, where various handicrafts are made and sold. Visitors can watch craftspeople creating mouth-blown glass, Gozo lace, pottery, and filigree, and of course, purchase the results.
Historically, Gharb played an important role in safeguarding Malta. Gharb’s coastal lookouts were, for example, the first to signal the arrival from Sicily of reinforcements for the beleaguered Maltese under the Knights of St. John in the Great Siege of Malta in 1565. During that time of constant threat from the Ottoman Turks and marauding Berbers, the L-Għarb lookouts were crucial, sending smoke signals to Malta to warn of approaching peril.
L-Għarb is the second oldest village parish in Gozo, established in 1679. The old church, known today as “Taż-Żejt”, served as the parish church for fifty years. It is called ‘Taz-Zejt’ (zejt meaning oil) because of a legend that says that an old woman found oil oozing from the side of the church, spread it over her body, and was cured of her ills.
Today’s impressive Parish Church and Collegiate Basilica that dominates the pretty square at the heart of the village was built in 1699 and consecrated in 1729. It is dedicated to the Visit of Our Lady to her cousin St. Elizabeth, popularly known as the Feast of the Visitation. The feast day is on the 31st of May each year and the festa is held on the first weekend of July.
A short and pleasant walk out of the village towards the coastal cliffs is the tiny chapel of St.Demetrius. Legend has it that Turkish raiders once stole the young son of a local lady called Sgugina. After the poor mother wept her distress in front of the sacred altar painting of St Demetrius in the chapel, the story goes that the saint was seen riding his horse out of the painting, charging the Turks and returning Żgugina’s son safely to his mother.
The area around Gharb and St Demetrius’ Chapel is delightful for walking and enjoying the countryside. If you follow the little road along the Wied il-Mielaħ (valley) you will have a lovely meander through the fertile Gozitan countryside before reaching the sea and a dramatic natural rock ‘window’ very much less visited than the iconic Azure Window at Dwejra.
Alternatively, you could just sit peacefully in Gharb’s picturesque village square, admiring the view of the church and the unique hand-carved stone balconies that adorn the village’s oldest homes, and watching the Gozitan world go by.
Facilities
Aircondition, Split system
Heating, Split system
Pool, Private
Solar photovoltaic panels
Solar water heater
Features
Balcony
Barbeque
Bath
Ceramic tiles
Courtyard
En suite bathroom
En suite shower
Garden, large
Ground floor bedroom
Guest cloakroom
High ceilings
Indoor fireplace
Internal stairs
Kitchen appliances
Laundry room
Next to green area
Quiet area
Sea view
Separate dining area
Spacious rooms
Study
Veranda, back
Distances
Amenities: 300 m
Sea: 2 km
Public transport: 300 m
Schools: 400 m
Currency
Contact
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