Description Building in the Heart of Setubal Great Opportunity for Investors in the Area of Tourism or Local Accommodation The building is located in the historic center of Setúbal, in the former parish of Santa Maria da Graça, covered by the ARU (Urban Rehabilitation Area), in a perfectly consolidated area and with a main entrance through Rua Major Afonso Pala (former Rua de Santo António), also having an access through Avenida 5 de Outubro. The building, although it is in full ownership, has a mixed use with floors or divisions that can be used independently, three on the ground floor, allocated to commerce, storage or storage and two on the first floor, allocated to housing. 1st Floor Drt with 8 rooms 1st Floor Left with 10 rooms Warehouse with 3 rooms with patio facing Av. October 5 Warehouse with 3 rooms Warehouse with a door to the courtyard called Visconde de Montalva The building was built on a section of the medieval city wall and seems to have effectively survived the 1755 earthquake. The property has very particular architectural characteristics, both for its size, which stands out in the closed urban core of Rua Major Afonso Pala and almost all the commercial downtown, where it is located, as well as for formal typologies that refer to the post-Renaissance period: the shape of the stonework, the railings of the balconies, the symmetry of the main façade, with glasses flanking the central door. These characteristics foreshadow a noble interior that, despite having undergone some changes over time, hints at the development of the original interior layout. The building has a set of roofs of simple attributes, but very effective in terms of zenith lighting (the light wells); The set of roofs, executed in a wooden structure, is natural to have already been repaired and replaced a few times. This property was part of the dowry of Ana Margarida de Melo, the wife of António Caetano de Sousa Brito Maldonado Bandeira, 1st Viscount of Montalvo. It was inhabited by his daughter and around the first decade of the century. XX used as a yield building, until 2021. Book your visit!