The renovation of the Chalet in the center of São Pedro de Penaferrim, former civil parish in the municipality of Sintra, Lisbon District, Portugal was meticulously carried out using the best materials and finishes. The property, which belonged to the father of architect Raul Lino, consists of a main house with three floors with three social areas and four bedrooms and a guest house with two bedrooms. The garden is divided into large flowerbeds, with large fruit and olive trees, a fountain and was designed by a landscape architect.
In the main house there is a large hall that gives access to the main living room with large glass doors to the garden with views of the Pena Palace. The walls and ceilings were all restored according to their original design, with high-relief branches in plaster and painted metal. The floor is in the original wood in a herringbone pattern.
On the lower floor there is a charming living room created in part of the old kitchen of the house, with tiled walls and an new open-plan kitchen and dining room. The kitchen is lined with wooden cabinets with straw shutters and pantry. The first floor features the primary suite with French doors that open to the greenery of the mountains, a large bathroom, and a bedroom that can be used as a sitting room, as a large primary closet or an office. On the second floor there is a bedroom, bathroom and large living room where two more bedrooms could be built. The guest house is divided into two floors, with an open-plan living room and kitchen, a guest bathroom, storage room and wine cellar, with the two bedrooms on the upper floor served by a bathroom.
The renovation work was completed with externally insulated walls and a new roof. All bathrooms have underfloor heating and some have a shower and bathtub. Both houses were decorated by interior architect Arnaud Cabri-Wiltzer in the original style of the home. In total there are seven bedrooms and seven bathrooms in the home making it a perfect B&B for the discerning buyer who has a little over $6M USD.
I can't lie...I LOVE the kitchen!!!!
ReplyDeleteOtherwise after a full-scale renovation and remodel I would absolutely love the house!!!
It's all a bit much for me, though that's mostly just the furnishings and some of the detail on the ceilings. I do love the space, though.
DeleteI agree with that!
DeleteThis is nice, though I'd definitely get rid of some of the furniture.
ReplyDeleteAlmost all of it would go to Lisbon Habitat Restore!
DeleteI like the guest house more than the main. The ceilings are okay in the main, but those floors would make me dizzy...just a bit too much.
ReplyDeleteI'm with you. I don't mind the floors, in the rooms with simpler ceiling details.
Deletethe dog's mother
ReplyDeletexoxo :-)
It's an interesting property, and I love how light filled the houses seem to be. They ought to have provided more photos of the views from the main house especially.
ReplyDeletePortugal is a wonderful country, and I'd love to have a second home there. Alas, the bank account is far too small for that. :)
It does seem like a beautiful area in which to live.
Delete😃 Guest house-10; main house-3! 🫣 It's so odd that the owners appreciate relaxation for the guests, but the family needs to be overstimulated! 😵💫
ReplyDeleteI'd live the opposite ... guests in the main house, me in the guesthouse!
DeleteThat's a great word for this house Cleora...overstimulated!!!!!
DeleteMy eyes!!!! Nope, nope, nope! A little bit too Seussian for me and I'm not a decorator so it would be too much work.
ReplyDeleteI could fix it, tone it down a bit .... but I'll have you stay in the guesthouse which is already more peaceful.
DeletePretty little gingerbread house exterior, but the interiors of the two houses cannot seem to decide what they are.
ReplyDeleteOne is an amusement park ride and one if a peaceful home???
Delete¡ Ôba !
ReplyDeleteBeaucoup de maisons dans les quartiers de Lisbonne sont charmantes, Chalet Lino ne fait pas exception.
De nombreuses maisons ont l'apparence
d'un chalet suisse. Sintra, Estoril et Cascais ont de belles maisons, la Riviera portugaise.
Je changerais les armoires, le papier peint et les meubles.
Je pense que la maison d'hôtes est meilleure que la maison principale.
-Beau Mec à Deauville
Oh!
DeleteMany houses in Lisbon's neighborhoods are charming, Chalet Lino is no exception.
Many houses have the appearance
of a Swiss chalet. Sintra, Estoril, and Cascais have beautiful houses, the Portuguese Riviera.
I would change the cabinets, wallpaper, and furniture.
I think the guesthouse is better than the main house.
I agree with you completely; the guest house seems better suited to my tastes!
Je suis tout à fait d'accord avec toi, la maison d'hôtes me semble plus adaptée à mes goûts !
Someone had a good time, but created a home that is so not me.
ReplyDeleteA good time and some crates of Albariño seem to have done the decorating trick!
DeleteI have mixed feelings about the home---If anything I love the guest house better----The main house has some great elements----Light, the abundance of doors to create indoor and outdoor living----Just take everything out and I will build it from there----The wall treatments in the main house cause me pause--The red room with the big assed chandelier and the blue wallpaper room by the stairs seems to compete with the rest of the room----Who is the star here----The furnishings or the installations of the room----Something has to give----The bathroom needs a tweak----TWO pedestals sinks----Why not a vanity with storage----Maybe two sinks makes things a little tight----The kitchen does not inspire me----Looks flat---Unfinished---Truth be told just let me move in to the guest house---The sage green I will have to see it----Maybe tone it down a little-----Checking the year round average temperature the climate is not too bad----Love the 80 degree temps in the summer months---All in all a great home----
ReplyDeleteI'd rent the main house and live in the guest house.
DeleteNo thanks, those kitchen cabinets would be hard to clean if you drip some tomato sauce on those woven fronts and I can imagine that happening. Those sofas are weird and don't fit the style of the house at all.
ReplyDeleteWell, you can always get new furniture and maybe try not so spill so much tomato sauce??? 😲😲😲
DeleteLisbon?
ReplyDeleteI'm in. And to tell you the truth, I'd rather have the guest house?
But yes, I'm ready to move in now...
XOXO
The guest house suits me better, too!
Deletexoxo
Interesting, but for that amount of money I would keep looking.
ReplyDeleteI would certainly simplify some of the interior finishes in the main house!
Delete$6 million! In Portugal! I don't think so.
ReplyDeleteTwo houses! Lisbon!
DeleteI love it! It's colorful and unusual and I would have so much fun playing with things and making appropriate changes so it would be just a little less of it what it is. A little calmer.
ReplyDeleteLove,
Janie
A little calmer would be good!
Deletexoxo
Yikes! That's awful.
ReplyDeleteWell, I don't know if it's awful because someone created it and lives there, but not your style? Sure.
DeleteThe pictures improved as they went on but to be honest my first thought was that either Louis XIV would step out of one of the rooms or Alice in Wonderland. That living room was pretty nice though!
ReplyDeleteIt is something else, isn't it?
Delete