Casa Palacio II

100% English Speaking Team

A grand residence in the Historic Heart of Seville

This casa palacio belongs to a very small group of properties in Seville’s old town: those large enough to accommodate a substantial celebration without asking the couple to leave the historic district in search of space.

It is a Renaissance residence, and it carries the architectural weight of that period — the proportions, the stonework, the sense of measured grandeur that defined the great Sevillian houses of the era. For couples who want their guests to wake up in the city centre, walk to the ceremony, and end the night steps from their hotel, this property offers something that is genuinely difficult to find: scale within the old town itself.

A progression of interior and semi-open spaces

The residence unfolds across a sequence of complementary spaces.

The covered interior patio serves as the architectural and ceremonial heart of the house, anchoring the celebration within the classical logic of the Sevillian palacio.

The loggia — the covered gallery characteristic of Renaissance domestic architecture — offers an intermediate setting between interior and exterior, ideal for cocktails, aperitifs, or transitional moments in the evening.

A covered garden extends the celebration under a protected canopy, while several smaller salons provide intimate rooms for private toasts, quieter conversations, or a change of register as the night progresses.

Together, the spaces allow a single event to move through distinct scenes without ever leaving the house.

Scalable spaces, a rare advantage in the Old Town

The defining feature of the residence is its flexibility. Most heritage properties in the historic district are bound by their original configurations and impose a rigid guest count on any event held within them.

This palacio operates differently: its layout allows for multiple room configurations, adapting effortlessly to intimate gatherings and larger celebrations alike. It is the kind of venue that supports a real planning conversation — where the architecture accommodates the event rather than dictating it — and that adaptability, within a protected heritage building in the centre of Seville, is the rarest quality the property offers.