Palazzo Rosi on the outskirts of the town of Bracciano, a splendid and fascinating building built in the late '800 and early '900 just for the Rosi family of the same name, under the constraint of the Fine Arts which have rightly recognized the historical and architectural value of the building as a whole, Frimm Magnum has the pleasure to manage the sale of the penthouse of this important building. Thanks to the efforts of a group of architects and work carried out on several occasions, the undisputed elegance and originality of the structure is the welcome postcard for anyone entering the town. Through a wrought-iron gate with a particularly distinctive floral design, which allowed carriages to enter at the time, one enters a neat square of modest size consisting of "Sampietrini" and well-kept perimeter flowerbeds. The original doorway at the entrance leads to the hallway where there is a small roomy enough to store bicycles. Ascending an unusual staircase characterized by an architectural play that makes it stately, one is ushered into a large reception hall surrounded by ribbed windows overlooking the terrace on the same floor; a double living room with high ceilings and a solemn archway is the central part of the apartment from which the doors to as many as four bedrooms, two of which have original frescoes on the ceilings, face each other. Kitchenette with ante-kitchen equipped with a fireplace and a bathroom complete the rooms of which the house is divided. The undisputed and out of the ordinary value certainly comes from the terrace on the top floor from which you can enjoy an exclusive total panoramic view of the Lake and the Castle up to Mount Soratte and the peaks of the Umbrian Apennines, impossible to comprehend through a simple description in words. In the center of the terrace is the typical turret that anyone passing through Bracciano will have seen rising upward with its elegant solemnity that gives the whole palace the sumptuous appearance it possesses. Two water storage rooms under the turret and a studio apartment on the second floor complete the property. Lastly, on the right side of the forecourt is a room that provides access to a long underground tunnel that served as a wartime shelter and in which there is a proprietary wine cellar. The architecture of the structure as a whole, the useful work of the Beaux-Arts through the scintigraphy that was able to rediscover its original color, all the ribbed windows, the high ceilings, the staircases with stone column balustrades, the stone pine cone sculptures and the sumptuous vases, make the context absolutely more unique than rare predisposing the property to multiple uses, both residential and receptive-tourist. Want to know more?