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The Development Type: From 1 bedroom to 3 bedrooms apartment Price: From €101,500 to €170,500 Expected yield: 4.5% Personal usage: None Lease length: 9 years Delivery date: 1st Quarter 2010 Facilities: fully secured residence, large terraces, calm residential area, close to transport links, amenities and Narbonne- Gruissan beach... Mediterranean Lifestyle The residence is located in a calm residential neighborhood; the residence is also the answer to the rental market demand in this city. It offers numerous equipments and facilities such as the large terraces to enjoy the Mediterranean atmosphere... The residence offers you the opportunity to either buy the property as an outright purchase as your primary or holiday home or buy-to-let scheme as an investment with rental income. Each apartment surface is between 35 to 78 sqm and large terraces of 30 sqm. They come with fully equipped kitchens, shutters, TV antenna, bicycle parking and outside parking slot. Close to... The development is located close to transports links, shops and amenities; it is also only 18 km or 10 min away from Narbonne-Gruissan Beach... Key facts about AUDE: - 329.400 inhabitants - Narbonne: 2nd largest city offering employment - La Narbonnaise, birthplace of the viticulture Key facts about LANGUEDOC-ROUSSILLON: - 3rd tourist region in France - 300 days of sun per year The Location About Narbonne Narbonne, Languedoc's charming baby-city... All in all, Narbonne is not a bad destination. True, it has none of the grandeur of Avignon or Carcassonne, but it's still a pleasant place to wind up for a couple of days wandering around the old medieval core and its lively streets. Narbonne's glory days though, when the town was the capital and steaming metropolis of the entire Languedoc region, are long gone and today the town is a compact and satisfying sort of a place that's home to just 47,000 people. The local economy is based squarely on the wine industry making the most of the renowned nearby vineyards of Corbières. Narbonne also functions as a transportation crossroads: at the junction of the A9 and A61 motorways, it's a doddle to reach from Toulouse, Barcelona and all points east along the Mediterranean. Narbonne's Top 5: 1. Archbishops' Palace. On the northern side of the main square, the place de l'Hôtel de Ville, this Gothic wonder is now home to the town hall and a couple of Narbonne's museums. 2. Cathédrale de St-Just and St-Pasteur. This is the only Gothic cathedral in the Mediterranean that comes anywhere close to rivaling those in the north of France. However, it remains uncompleted because at the time of construction in the early 1300s it was considered too risky for defensive reasons to knock down the Roman defensive wall nearby. Hence, there's no nave. 3. Gruissan beach. Twenty kilometres south of Narbonne, the beach at Gruissan was used as the setting for the film, Betty Blue (known as 37.2 degrees in French). Its here you'll find the unusual beach huts on stilts that featured in some of the location shots. 4. Horreum. Despite Narbonnne's importance in Roman times, this former granary is the only building to survive from the period. In fact, until 1838 it remained undiscovered. Only when demolition work was underway hereabouts did the horreum reappear. Only a fraction of the original has been excavated and consists of a warren of tiny storage chambers. 5. Patisserie Combot. At Rue de l'Ancien Courrier, this bakers is a Narbonne institution known for its gooey cakes and pastries - don't leave town without trying their bouchons du Languedoc, coarse biscuits made of honey and almonds with generous helpings of pine nuts. Access By road: Narbonne / Paris: 787 km Narbonne / Toulouse: 151 km Narbonne / Montpellier: 90 km Narbonne / Barcelone: 250 km By train: Paris TGV (High speed train): 4h30 Toulouse TGV (High speed train): 1h15 Montpellier TGV (High speed train): 50 min By plane: Beziers-Vias airport: 3 regular flights to Paris and flights to England and Denmark
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