3 Jul, 2010 @ 00:01
1 min read
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EXCLUSIVE: Spain’s full circle

HE is the man often credited with starting the avalanche that turned the Costa del Sol into concrete.

So some might see it as poetic justice that the country home of Prince Alfonso von Hohenlohe is being dug up to make way for a ring road.

The German aristocrat – who once dated Ava Gardner and Kim Novac – was the first person to make the Costa del Sol fashionable when he opened the upmarket Marbella Club hotel in 1954.

“Everywhere I sought my dreamt-of city, and at last I found it in Ronda.”

One of the coast’s first property speculators, he had begun buying up land around the area in the 1940s and sold plots to wealthy developers and families, including the Thyssens and Rothschilds.

But later, in the 1990s, he fled to the mountains, near Ronda, to get away from the overdevelopment he had begun five decades earlier.

At the time he said: “Everywhere I sought my dreamt-of city, and at last I found it in Ronda.”

So, it is with some irony that his palatial home and vineyard, Cortijo de las Monjas, is on the verge of losing its front gate and drive as a new-ring road gets built next door.

The 20-hectare vineyard has already lost hundreds of vines, as the diggers carve the two-lane bypass around the village of Arriate.

But, that will be nothing compared to the noise of the new road that will improve the journey time between Ronda and Setenil de las Bodegas and ease traffic in Arriate.

“It is certainly an irony that the man who started the whole concrete revolution on the coast should end up with a road going through his garden,” said a neighbour.

The problem however has been left to his sons, as the Prince himself died in 2003.

Jon Clarke (Publisher & Editor)

Jon Clarke is a Londoner who worked at the Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday as an investigative journalist before moving to Spain in 2003 where he helped set up the Olive Press.

After studying Geography at Manchester University he fell in love with Spain during a two-year stint teaching English in Madrid.

On returning to London, he studied journalism and landed his first job at the weekly Informer newspaper in Teddington, covering hundreds of stories in areas including Hounslow, Richmond and Harrow.

This led on to work at the Sunday Telegraph, Sunday Mirror, Standard and even the Sun, before he landed his first full time job at the Daily Mail.

After a year on the Newsdesk he worked as a Showbiz correspondent covering mostly music, including the rise of the Spice Girls, the rivalry between Oasis and Blur and interviewed many famous musicians such as Joe Strummer and Ray Manzarak, as well as Peter Gabriel and Bjorn from Abba on his own private island.

After a year as the News Editor at the UK’s largest-selling magazine Now, he returned to work as an investigative journalist in Features at the Mail on Sunday.

As well as tracking down Jimi Hendrix’ sole living heir in Sweden, while there he also helped lead the initial investigation into Prince Andrew’s seedy links to Jeffrey Epstein during three trips to America.

He had dozens of exclusive stories, while his travel writing took him to Jamaica, Brazil and Belarus.

He is the author of three books; Costa Killer, Dining Secrets of Andalucia and My Search for Madeleine.

Contact jon@theolivepress.es

1 Comment

  1. Spain is to blame for allowing the overbuilding, not the developers. Developers were allowed, indeed encouraged, to concrete over the coast; the Spanish authorities could have said “no, we don’t want a Concrete Costa” but they were greedy and are now paying the price for this. The Costa de la Luz will now have its pristine beaches concreted over next – people clearly want more hotels rather then pristine natural beaches?

    Similary, the BP issue: people ought to realise that it’s not Mr Haywards fault there has been a disaster in the Gulf of Mexico, it’s all our faults for demanding that our cars can be fuelled and that our electricity supply continues unhindered. No one has green credentials; we are all hypocrites.

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