Excellent getaway for sale by the sea in Sines.Stunning villa with three floors, terrace overlooking the bay of Sines, with a gross area of 171.39m² of well-used space.House consisting of ground floor with kitchen, bedroom and service bathroom, ground floor with two bedrooms, bathroom and balcony, on the first floor with terrace and studio.Imagine waking up every morning to the ocean breeze and the soothing sound of the waves.Excellent location, in the historic centre of Sines, close to all kinds of shops, 2 minutes walk to the beach.Location:Sines is a Portuguese city in the district of Setúbal and its history has been shaped by the seaThe municipality is bordered to the north and east by the municipality of Santiago do Cacém, to the south by Odemira and to the west by the Atlantic Ocean.It is located 160 km south of Lisbon, at the tip of Cabo de Sines, which separates the Alentejo coast into 2 parts: to the north extensive beaches of fine sand to Troia and to the south cove beaches that are part of the Natural Park of Southwest Alentejo and Costa Vicentina.The Phoenicians were the first to explore the region and the Romans made Sines a port near Miróbriga (Santiago do Cacém) - the origin of the word Sines comes from the Latin Sinus, 'cutout of the sea coast'The best-known son of Sines was the navigator Vasco da Gama, a knight of the Order of Christ, who entered history when he discovered the sea route to India at the end of the fifteenth century.From Prehistory to the present day, it was the sea and its resources that defined the economy, culture, composition and even the character of its people, to that extent, the history of Sines is vast from the evidence of the existence of human populations through traces of some of these settlements discovered in archaeological stations such as Palmeirinha and Quitéria, passing through the Italian Naval School in Sines in the fifteenth/sixteenth centuries, which trained as a naval engineer in the construction of ships for the service of the kingdom and the other kingdoms of Europe, to the agreement between Portugal and England in the nineteenth century to start the productivity of agriculture, animals and cork in territory on the Alentejo Coast and the development of the villages of Sines, Santiago do Cacém, Odemira, Santo André and Milfontes.