Elegant, quiet and very spacious apartment, with large living room well furnished with partially antique furniture and paintings, enriched by a veranda with beautiful view, two bedrooms with two luxurious bathrooms, complete with toilet, sink, bidet, shower, terrace with table and chairs. Each room overlooks a balcony, including the kitchen, habitable. The finishes are valuable.
TV and free extra-fast Wi-Fi; air conditionig -heat pump in the dining room and air conditioning in the second bedroom. For more than four-five persons we can open a rhird bathroom, with shower and bathtube. There is a foam fire extinguisher and a gas detector in the kitchen.
The apartment is located on the hill Gianicolo, between Trastevere and Vatican city, reachable on foot or by a short bus ride (44, 75, 870 and others), urban train FL3, taxi (big station less than 150 meters), in the elegant district called Monte Verde Vecchio. Excellent big supermarket and shops in the same street, another supermarket open until 10 pm, outdoor market in the parallel street. Elegant bars and patisseries, excellent restaurants and takeaways close by (50-200 meters).
Three historical parks are the pride of the neighborhood: the Gianicolo Park, through which you can reach the Vatican with a walk from the wonderful view of Rome; villa Sciarra, which was donated to Mussolini who gave it to the Roman people, villa Pamphili, summer residence of the Popes from the 16th century. The Gianicolo is famous for its large 360-degree terrace on Rome with the monument to Garibaldi and his wife Anita and the busts of his soldiers (Garibaldi) and the war memorial in the defense of the Roman republic. Always on the Janiculum, the famous "fontanone" overlooks the city, and immediately after the church of San Pietro in Montorio, with the marvelous little temple of Bramante, the Spanish Academy with its exibitions and the American Academy. An the ancient staircase from there leads to Trastevere. The Gianicolensi Walls surround the Gianicolo hill and, at Porta San Pancrazio, in the four-sided arch, is housed the Garibaldi Museum, in memory of the Hero who fought for the defense of the Roman Republic in 1849. The villa called "Il Vascello" because of its shape, has been left almost completely destroyed with the signs of the cannonades of the French by General Oudinot. From the Arch of the Janiculum, in Piazzale Aurelio, starts the Via Aurelia Antica, and a little further on is the early Christian Basilica of San Pancrazio (fifth century after Christ), with the catacombs not yet fully explored. In one part of the district the streets have maintained the Latin names (via Aurelia, via Vitellia, via Fonteiana, piazza Ottavilla, via del clivo Rutario).
You will be at the heart of history.
Check everything on internet maps and don't hesitate to ask me anything. I live at the same house number, in the building next to yours.