


FINCA SAMARTÍN Valle de Guerra · San Cristóbal de La Laguna · Tenerife More than five centuries of history. Thirteen hectares. A single title deed. One of the last great private estates in northern Tenerife. The kind of buyer who would consider Samartín no longer needs another house. What they can no longer find is scale, history and privacy held within a single estate, still in private hands. Samartín is one of the few. In the temperate uplands of Valle de Guerra, on the green northern side of Tenerife, two sister estates share the same valley. The first, the Casa de Carta, built in the eighteenth century by Captain Matías Rodríguez Carta, is today the seat of the Museum of History and Anthropology of Tenerife. The second, Samartín, remains what both once were: a living, intact estate — and, for the first time in generations, available to a new custodian. THE ESTATE More than thirteen hectares unfold without interruption — and without visible neighbours — from the historic Camino del Boquerón and Camino de Moya up to the ridge of the cordillera. A single property. A single title. A horizon owned from edge to edge, set upon the same volcanic soils that for centuries made Valle de Guerra one of the great winegrowing regions of the Canary archipelago. At the heart of the estate stand 414 m² of established residences: the principal manor house —the casa solariega— and a second dwelling traditionally known as the casa de medianeros, the tenant farmer's house. Both are habitable from day one. Surrounding them lie historic vineyards, irrigated orchards, open pasture and untouched hillsides, watered by the natural springs of the ridge above. All within the municipality of San Cristóbal de La Laguna — a UNESCO World Heritage city. A LINEAGE OF EUROPEAN STATURE The historic estates that reach the market in Bordeaux, Tuscany or the Cotswolds typically present two or three centuries of pedigree. Samartín offers more than five. In 1496, Alonso Fernández de Lugo, Adelantado of the Canaries, completed the conquest of Tenerife. Two years later, in 1498, he granted the entire valley to Lope Fernández de la Guerra —from whose surname the place takes its name— as reward for his role in the conquest. From that founding distribution arose the human geography of Valle de Guerra: a handful of great estates, worked for five centuries by the families who would shape the viticulture, the international trade and the architecture of the northern coast. From the same conquering circle descends the House of Benítez de Lugo, one of the founding lineages of Tenerife, which in 1559 established one of the oldest entailed estates —mayorazgos— in the archipelago. Three centuries later, the line of Samartín crystallised in a singular figure: Don Ángel Benítez de Lugo y Cólogan (1855–1928), X Marquis of La Celada, documented as titleholder of this estate from the late nineteenth century. His name united two of the most significant houses in Tenerife's history: The Benítez de Lugo, of the conqueror's circle. The Cólogan, the Irish merchant house of La Orotava who for two centuries dominated the international trade in Canary Malvasia — the legendary Canary Sack celebrated by Shakespeare — that carried the islands' name to the courts and cellars of Europe. Since then, Samartín has remained within the orbit of the same family, generation after generation, to the present day. ENGINEERED, BY ITS OWN GEOGRAPHY, FOR THE FUTURE Beyond its agricultural and historical assets, the estate offers a rare topographical advantage few comparable properties can claim: a private mountain with a fifty-metre vertical drop, contained entirely within the estate's boundaries. This natural elevation, paired with Tenerife's exceptional year-round solar irradiance —among the highest in Europe—, provides an ideal foundation for a closed-loop micro-pumped hydro or gravity storage system, opening a credible path to complete off-grid energy independence. A historic estate, prepared by its own geography for the demands of the next century. WHAT IS ACQUIRED Samartín is not a property. It is a position. To acquire it is to become custodian of a living chapter in Tenerife's history, and to receive an asset whose combination of attributes can scarcely be replicated: - One of the last great privately held historic estates in northern Tenerife, in a market where comparable properties survive only as public museums, institutional hotels or corporate wineries. - Genuine, undivided scale: thirteen contiguous hectares under a single deed, on an island where the fragmentation of land has made the reassembly of such a holding all but impossible. - A documented, verifiable and transmissible lineage, anchored in the conqueror of the island, in a sixteenth-century founding mayorazgo, and in the Marquisate of La Celada. - A residence ready to be inhabited from day one, and at the same time an exceptional canvas for a singular vision. - An exceptional microclimate —averaging 18–24 °C year-round— and volcanic soil among the most highly regarded in Canarian viticulture. - The topographic foundation for genuine off-grid energy autonomy, a rare strategic asset in a historic estate of this category. - A privileged strategic position: ten minutes from the Atlantic, twenty from Santa Cruz, twenty-five from Tenerife North International Airport, and within UNESCO-listed La Laguna. - The Canary Islands' singular fiscal regime (REF, ZEC) and pathways to European residency, in one of the most discreet —and therefore most private— historic property markets in Europe. FOUR POSSIBLE FUTURES Few properties sustain, with equal legitimacy, four distinct visions. Samartín accommodates them all: 01 · A multigenerational family seat A domain for children and grandchildren, transmissible under the same name by which it has already passed for more than a century. 02 · A signature boutique winery Set upon one of the most highly regarded volcanic terroirs in the Canary Islands, in the wake of the wine renaissance that has carried Canarian labels to the Michelin tables of Tokyo, New York and Copenhagen. 03 · An ultra-luxury rural hospitality concept A boutique retreat possessed of the historical depth and landscape scale that the world's leading luxury hospitality brands now demand, subject to applicable planning consent. 04 · A private reserve and regenerative agriculture project One of the few continuous tracts on the island where such a vision remains possible. For more than five centuries, Samartín has belonged to a single story. The next chapter is yours to write. The private dossier is released upon request, subject to prior qualification of interest. Viewings are conducted strictly by private appointment.
Ref: 821470
Others informations
Energy performance diagnosis
142 kWh/m².year
Greenhouse gas emission index
29 kgCO2/m².year
Contact
* Mandatory field
Others property types in San Cristóbal de La Laguna