Quinta do Lago: five decates being "it"
The real estate agent was late. Maybe it would be best to give up, maybe there was no point. He could be putting his time to better use, instead of just waiting there. But the agent arrived, at the wheel of a Renault 4L. Their bumpy drive took them around the Ria Formosa area, but also took them, along a myriad of beaten earth tracks, to disappointment. On that day in April 1970, they managed to get lost in the marshland. Lunchtime was approaching, and frustration mounting, the day seemed as good as lost. Perhaps the name of the 300-year-old farm — Quinta dos Descabeçados (Farm of the Beheaded) — was in itself a warning to knock the idea on its head. But the agent insisted. The race to transform the southern coast of the country had already begun, albeit in the shadows (he was at a party in the Bahamas when a Swedish salesman told him that the Algarve was the future, piquing his interest). It may be that the light was hiding somewhere on these properties belonging to banker Afonso Pinto de Magalhães — but let’s continue. They went through a pine grove, ended up on a hill and, suddenly, there it was: the green and blue melting into each other, the white of the dunes almost painful to the eye, space and time suspended, limits tending towards the infinite. “This is it”.