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Property details
- Property ID: CDS00021
- Price: € 550,000
- Built Size: 124m
- Terrace Size: 48m
- Bedrooms: 3
- Bathrooms: 2
- Property Type: Middle Floor Apartment
- Kitchen: Fully Fitted
- Pool: Communal
- Views: Mountain
- Garden: Communal
- Parking: Underground Garage
- Security: Electric Blinds Entry Phone
Setting
- Close To Golf Close To Shops Close To Schools Urbanisation
Description
Great opportunity for INVESTMENT seekers to purchase an apartment with three bedrooms and two bathrooms, en-suite in the Master bedroom, in the central area of the Marbella's Golf Valley, Nueva Andalucia.
The property benefits from a large lounge and dining area which opens onto an East-facing terrace, allowing the residents to enjoy the morning sun.
The apartment also boasts a fully fitted kitchen.
Price includes an underground garage space and storage room, that can be accesed by lift.
Gated community with swimming pool and well manteined gardens, walking distance to amenities, golf course, schools, public transportation and more..
It should be noted that the apartment is currently rented until September 2026.
Features
- Covered Terrace Lift Fitted Wardrobes Near Transport Private Terrace Storage Room Ensuite Bathroom Marble Flooring Double Glazing
Location
- Area: Costa del Sol
- Town: Aloha
About:
Aloha ( ə-LOH-hah, Hawaiian: [əˈlohə]) is the Hawaiian word for love, affection, peace, compassion and mercy, that is commonly used as a greeting.
It can be used to welcome or bid farewell to someone also.
It has a deeper cultural and spiritual significance for native Hawaiians, who use the term to define a force that holds together existence.
Aloha is also considered central to the traditional Hawaiian practice of hoʻoponopono.
The word is found in all Polynesian languages and always with the same basic meaning of "love, compassion, sympathy, kindness." Its use in Hawaii has a seriousness lacking in the Tahitian and Samoan meanings.
Mary Kawena Pukui wrote that the "first expression" of aloha was between a parent and child.
Lorrin Andrews wrote the first Hawaiian dictionary, called A Dictionary of the Hawaiian Language.
In it, he describes aloha as "A word expressing different feelings: love, affection, gratitude, kindness, pity, compassion, grief, the modern common salutation at meeting; parting".
Mary Kawena Pukui and Samuel Hoyt Elbert's Hawaiian Dictionary: Hawaiian-English, English-Hawaiian also contains a similar definition.
Anthropologist Francis Newton states that "Aloha is a complex and profound sentiment.
Such emotions defy definition".
Anna Wierzbicka concludes that the term has "no equivalent in English".
The word aloha is hard to translate into any other language because it comprises complex ways of being and of interacting with and loving all of creation.
An ethic of care and respect for all people and all elements of the land is wrapped up in aloha; it is a way of showing connection and reverence.
Queen Liliʻuokalani is known to have said, "Aloha is to learn what is not said, to see what cannot be seen, and to know the unknowable".
After the death of Lili'uokalani, some Native Hawaiians, considering her as an embodiment of a Hawaiian ali'i consoled themselves, "There will always be a Hawaii as long as there is aloha and forgiveness." Another way to interpret aloha is as an energy exchange — the giving and receiving of positive energy.
Aloha has been described as the coordination of the heart and mind to foster connectivity and peace.
The state of Hawaii introduced the Aloha Spirit law in 1986, which mandates that state officials and judges treat the public with Aloha.
The University of Hawai'i's Center for Labor Education and Research hosts the above statute of the Spirit of Aloha, which breaks down the concept into an acronym using each of the letters of the word:
"'Akahai,' meaning kindness, to be expressed with tenderness;
'Lōkahi,' meaning unity, to be expressed with harmony;
'ʻOluʻolu,' meaning agreeable, to be expressed with pleasantness;
'Haʻahaʻa,' meaning humility, to be expressed with modesty;
'Ahonui,' meaning patience, to be expressed with perseverance."