Immediately available, first floor with view of rear gardens, furnished and equipped. The property features three rooms: a spacious, ultra‑bright living‑dining area with a large bay window, a large kitchen with laundry space. Two bedrooms separated by a full bathroom, both with large wooden‑lined wardrobes, ceiling fans, blinds and access to a balcony overlooking green views. The building offers an elevator and stairs for those wishing to exercise.
Approximate dimensions: kitchen 2.00 × 3.50 = 6.50 m²; living 5.25 × 3.50 = 18.37 m²; bedroom 3.00 × 2.00 = 6.00 m²; bedroom 3.00 × 3.00 = 9.00 m²; full bathroom 1.80 × 1.30 = 2.34 m². Ultra‑bright and well‑ventilated.
The reported measurements and areas are approximate; it is expressly stated that the definitive dimensions will be those derived from the property title and/or plans and/or cadastral certificate of the subject property.
Acassuso is a locality situated in the San Isidro Partido‑Municipality, located within the Greater Buenos Aires metropolitan area, Argentina. The locality lies 7.3 km from its nearest access to the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires and 20 km north of the capital's city center. Covering 2.5 km², it is the smallest of the six localities that make up the San Isidro partido, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina. Its origins trace back to lots No. 52, 53 and 54 awarded by Juan de Garay to Ambrosio Acosta, Rodrigo Gómez de Saravia and Pablo Simbrón, though Acassuso extends only to half of the originally granted distance.
Its boundaries are the Río de la Plata to the northeast, General Pueyrredón street to the southeast, Santa Fe Avenue to the southwest, and Roque Sáenz Peña street to the northwest. It borders the localities of Martínez to the southwest and San Isidro to the northwest.
The historic landmark of the neighborhood is the “Ombú de la Esperanza,” under whose shade General José de San Martín and Juan Martín de Pueyrredón met around 1816 to plan Argentina’s independence.
The Acassuso Station on the Mitre Line, Retiro‑Tigre electric branch, was inaugurated in 1933; it originally served as an intermediate stop between San Isidro and Martínez stations. Acassuso also has a station on the Tren de la Costa line, Barrancas Station, in lower Acassuso.
Public transport options: Mitre Tigre branch train; buses: 60, 203, 343, 707, 371, 365.
San Isidro · Acassuso · Buenos Aires