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appraisal<br />
COMMON AREAS<br />
Common areas feature Sub 9, Sub 10 and Sub 11 respectively as a Management Office, the Private<br />
Entrance from p.za Capizucchi and the Theater; at the ground floor of the Palazzetto.<br />
The Office, Sub.9, consists of a single room with a recently restored fresco at the center of the<br />
ceiling, it has travertine floors and its walls are equipped with a sink, now dismantle. It will be necessary<br />
to install the heating and air conditioning system.<br />
The Private Theater, Sub.10, consists in a specious unit of three rooms and a bathroom. The floor<br />
of the ground floor is made of faux wood. The electrical, plumbing and heating systems have been<br />
recently renovated. Install a cutting-edge movie projector, a security system, refurbishment of the<br />
bathroom in the basement, and other adjustments.<br />
The Private Entrance. Sub.11, the entrance from Capizucchi square allows using it independently,<br />
becoming a private and securing entry for the guests. It needs to be equipped.<br />
CONCLUSION:<br />
Implementation of security and home automation systems for all premises, according to the latest<br />
technological standards. As well as the development of a sophisticated “landscape” and a botanical<br />
and architectural intervention at the garden of the first floor and the rooftop terrace.<br />
7 – ADDITIONAL REMARKS ON THE LOCATION OF THE REAL ESTATE PROPERTY<br />
The property in question is located in Rome, in the historic Rione Campitelli, the tenth district, between<br />
Via dei Fori Imperiali, Via di San Gregorio, Via dei Cerchi, Via San Teodoro and the stretch<br />
of streets and squares near the Theatre of Marcellus. The small size of the area and, above all, its<br />
richness in prominent archaeological sites and museums make it the least populous district of the<br />
City: with very few residential buildings and less than one thousand residents.<br />
The coat of arms of the District bears a black head of a dragon against a white background: it goes<br />
back to the medieval legend of an evil monster which in the fourth century was threatening to the<br />
Roman Forum until it was driven out through the intervention of Pope Sylvester I, also renowned,<br />
by tradition, to be an exorcist. There are conflicting opinions about the origin of the name of the<br />
district, ‘Campitelli’: some say it derives from Capitolium, the highest of the seven hills, on top of<br />
which stood the most important ancient Roman temple dedicated to the worship of the triad of<br />
Jupiter, Juno and Minerva. Another opinion attributes the etymology to the Latin name Campus<br />
Telluris (‘dirt field’), in consideration of the fact that the name ‘Campitelli’ is also found in other cities.<br />
Before the founding of Rome, until the ninth century BC, the area was only a marshy valley:<br />
only later, when some tribes settled on the surrounding hills, did the area begin to function as a<br />
meeting place for commercial purposes. Then, it became the throbbing heart of the public life of<br />
the ancient agglomeration.