House & Garden
A full tour of Can Serenico — from the kitchen pavilion and the pool, to the pergola, sauna, gym, hammam and office, out into the botanical garden and down toward the sea.
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The Master Bedroom
The master bedroom opens onto a private terrace beneath a centuries-old pine. Lime-washed walls in pale ochre, linen drapes that breathe with the breeze, and an ensuite bathroom open to the trees.







The Guest Bedrooms
Just steps from the master house, the guest house holds four bedrooms and four bathrooms. Each opens onto its own piece of the garden — a private terrace, a courtyard, a stretch of pine canopy — and each is dressed in the same lime-washed plaster, linen and vintage pieces as the rest of the villa. Made for families and friends to share the place without ever feeling on top of one another.
















The Terrace
A lounge corner shaded by ancient pines, set with rattan chairs and linen cushions. The Mediterranean glints between the branches; bougainvillea spills over the parapet.

The Pergola
Right in front of the main living room, a giant Balinese-style pergola — black steel posts crowned with thick palm thatch and raffia chandeliers — turns the summer house into one continuous room. Deep linen sofas, kilim cushions and a vast hardwood coffee table sit open to the garden of cactus, palms and pines, so the indoor salon and the outdoor lounge flow seamlessly into each other.




The Pool
A long stone-edged pool stretched between umbrella pines, a thatched pavilion for slow lunches, and loungers shaded by linen parasols. Every object you see here was personally curated by the owner — a Franco-Italian entrepreneur shaped by years between Europe and the United States, now based in Rome. Pieces were sourced one by one, mostly through 1stDibs: woven lanterns and a live-edge dining table from a gallery in Vienna, Scandinavian teak loungers found in Copenhagen, ceramics and rattan accents shipped over from Palm Springs. Nothing here is off-the-shelf — the pool is simply where the collection meets the water.
























The Kitchen
Black steel doors fold open to the garden, revealing a generous island, pendant lights and soft lime-washed walls. By day it feels airy and practical; by dusk it glows like a lantern in the palms.



















The TV Room
A tucked-away room in lime-washed plaster, low daybeds in rust-toned chenille and a vintage Stilnovo chandelier. A woven wall hanging, a Moroccan jar, and a window framing the pines — made for film nights and long siestas.


The Gym
A fully equipped private gym fitted out with brand-new Technogym machines — Skillbike, free weights, kettlebells, a Swiss ball and a heavy bag — set in a lime-washed room with a full-height antique-framed mirror and steel-framed doors that fold open to the pine grove. Train indoors with the breeze coming through, or roll the mat outside under the trees.

The Hammam
A private hammam in pale tadelakt with heated stone benches, an Effegibi steam generator and a chromotherapy lamp that glows from amber to deep red. A slow ritual of steam and warm light, just steps from the sauna and ice plunge.

Sauna & Ice Plunge
A hand-shingled sauna pavilion set among the junipers — infrared inside, oak ice-plunge barrels and a cold shower outside. A small Nordic ritual on the edge of the Mediterranean garden.






The Office
A standalone office shipped in from the Far East — a hand-shingled timber igloo set deep among the Norfolk pines, with arched glazing opening directly onto the pool. Wired with 1 Gb fibre internet, it sits apart from both the master house and the guest house, offering total tranquillity for working without ever leaving the garden. A leather Eames-style chair, a long desk, a green-tiled bench of art books and a daybed piled with herringbone cushions: a serene cabin to think, write and take calls from, with the water glinting through the trees.




The Garden
More than a Mediterranean garden, Can Serenico's grounds are a full botanical collection — designed and planted by a professional landscape architect, something genuinely rare in Ibiza. Hundreds of species coexist here: umbrella and Norfolk pines, fan and date palms, banana trees, fig and olive, prickly pear, agave, yucca, frangipani, bougainvillea, jasmine, oleander, dragon trees, cycads, ferns and aromatic herbs. Paths wind through clipped hedges, gravel courts and wild scrub down toward the sea and the silhouette of Es Vedrà on the horizon. Sunsets here are the day's quiet finale; a vintage Ford and a row of surfboards wait by the gate.





















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