Casa entera·Alojamiento particular
Cabaña clásica frente al mar en la playa "UNA SEMANA A LA IZQUIERDA"
Galería de imágenes de Cabaña clásica frente al mar en la playa "UNA SEMANA A LA IZQUIERDA"





Comentarios
10 de 10
Excepcional
3 habitaciones1 baño o más4 huéspedes111.5 metros cuadrados
Servicios populares
Echa un vistazo a la zona

Block Island, RI
- Place, Old HarborA 14 min a pie
- Place, Crescent BeachA 17 min a pie
- Place, Playa BallardA 18 min a pie
- Airport, Block Island, RI (BID-Block Island State)A 3 min en coche
Habitaciones y camas
3 habitaciones (capacidad para 4 personas)
Habitación 1
1 cama de matrimonio
Habitación 2
1 cama doble
Habitación 3
2 camas individuales
1 baño y 1 aseo
Baño 1
WC
Baño 2
Bañera o ducha · WC
Otros espacios
Cocina
Zona de juegos al aire libre
Jardín
Comedor
Acerca de este alojamiento
Cabaña clásica frente al mar en la playa "UNA SEMANA A LA IZQUIERDA"
Añade las fechas para ver los precios
Servicios
Cocina
Lavadora
Secadora
Wifi gratis
Espacio al aire libre
Vistas a la playa
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- Lavadora
- Secadora
- Aire acondicionado
Normas del alojamiento
Hora de comienzo del registro de entrada: 15:00
Edad mínima para alquilar: 35
Hora límite del registro de salida: 10:00
Menores
Se admiten niños a partir de cualquier edad
Eventos
No se permiten eventos
Mascotas
No se admiten mascotas
Fumadores
No se permite fumar
Información importante
Otros detalles
Este alojamiento está gestionado por un propietario particular (es decir, una parte que no actúa dentro de su mercado, negocio o profesión). No se aplicará la legislación de protección de consumidores de la UE a tu reserva, incluido el derecho de desistimiento. La política de cancelación establecida por el propietario particular cubrirá tu reserva.
Puede aplicarse un recargo por cada persona adicional, según la política del alojamiento.
A tu llegada, pueden pedirte un documento de identidad oficial con foto y una tarjeta de crédito o débito, o un depósito en efectivo, para cubrir los gastos imprevistos.
No se garantizan las solicitudes especiales, que están sujetas a disponibilidad en el momento de la llegada y pueden suponer un recargo adicional.
Está terminantemente prohibido celebrar fiestas u otros eventos en grupo en las instalaciones.
El propietario ha indicado que el alojamiento cuenta con un detector de monóxido de carbono.
El propietario ha indicado que el alojamiento cuenta con un detector de humo.
Entre los elementos de seguridad de este alojamiento, se incluyen los siguientes: extintor y botiquín de primeros auxilios.
Número de registro de la propiedad RE.25163-STR, 12/30/2025
Información sobre la zona
Isla Block
Esta casa de vacaciones se encuentra en Isla Block, en la playa. Sachem Pond Wildlife Refuge y Parque Nathan Mott son una buena muestra de la belleza natural de la región, donde también puedes acercarte a atractivos turísticos como Abrams Animal Farm o Laberinto Sagrado. Tendrás la oportunidad de disfrutar del agua realizando actividades como paseos en moto de agua o kayak, pero también podrás vivir grandes aventuras practicando la equitación o las rutas a pie o en bicicleta en las inmediaciones.

Block Island, RI
Qué hay en los alrededores
- Playa de Fred Benson Town - A 9 min a pie - 0.8 km
- Great Salt Pond - A 13 min a pie - 1.1 km
- Old Harbor - A 14 min a pie - 1.2 km
- Crescent Beach - A 17 min a pie - 1.5 km
- Playa Ballard - A 18 min a pie - 1.5 km
Cómo moverse por la zona
Restaurantes
- Poor People's Pub - A 8 min a pie
- Spring House Hotel - A 19 min a pie
- Odd Fellows Cafe - A 12 min a pie
- The Barn At Spring House - A 15 min a pie
- The National Hotel - A 10 min a pie
Preguntas frecuentes
Comentarios
10
Excepcional
Los comentarios se muestran en orden cronológico, están sujetos a un proceso de moderación y se han verificado a menos que se indique lo contrario.
Leer másSe abre en una ventana nueva10/10
Limpieza
10/10
Llegada
10/10
Comunicación
10/10
Ubicación
10/10
Precisión del anuncio
Comentarios
Verificado
27 de jun de 2023
Aspectos positivos: Limpieza, llegada, comunicación, ubicación y precisión del anuncio
Se alojó 7 noches en junio de 2023
Verificado
10/10 Excelente
Anneliese T.
11 de jun de 2023
Aspectos positivos: Limpieza, llegada, comunicación, ubicación y precisión del anuncio
Absolutely magical home
Anneliese T.
Se alojó 7 noches en junio de 2023
Comentario archivado
10/10 Excelente
5 de jul de 2014
An idyllic retreat
Verificado
10/10 Excelente
Jessica P.
7 de ago de 2022
Aspectos positivos: Limpieza, llegada, comunicación, ubicación y precisión del anuncio
Fantastic location, wonderful hosts!
Jessica P.
Se alojó 14 noches en julio de 2022
Verificado
10/10 Excelente
Jill S.
28 de sept de 2021
Aspectos positivos: Limpieza, llegada, comunicación, ubicación y precisión del anuncio
The breezy cottage
Jill S.
Se alojó 4 noches en septiembre de 2021
Verificado
10/10 Excelente
jim h.
8 de jun de 2021
Aspectos positivos: Limpieza, llegada, comunicación, ubicación y precisión del anuncio
Cottage Captures Island Vibe w/ Panache
jim h.
Se alojó 7 noches en junio de 2021
Verificado
10/10 Excelente
Debra K.
19 de jun de 2020
Aspectos positivos: Limpieza, llegada, comunicación, ubicación y precisión del anuncio
This is the nicest cottage rental I have ever been in. I am very sad about leaving!
Debra K.
Se alojó 7 noches en junio de 2020
Acerca de su propietario/a
Propietario/a: John/Pam Gasner
Architect, designer and jack-of-all-trades John Gasner has lived on Block Island for over 50 years. His wife Pam Gasner is an 11th generation Block Islander and also a historian and artist.
Both John and Pam, are preservation-minded and have long worked to safeguard the vernacular island architecture and history of the Island (Pam having been on the Board of Directors as well as Executive Director of the local Historical Society since 1985. She is also currently the Vice-President of the Southeast Lighthouse Foundation and a member of the 250 Gaspee Committee. John chaired the Historic District Commission for numerous years and now designs furniture at the Sandy Point Studio. The couple ran the Crescent Pond Gallery from 1997 - 2007.
Both John and Pam, are preservation-minded and have long worked to safeguard the vernacular island architecture and history of the Island (Pam having been on the Board of Directors as well as Executive Director of the local Historical Society since 1985. She is also currently the Vice-President of the Southeast Lighthouse Foundation and a member of the 250 Gaspee Committee. John chaired the Historic District Commission for numerous years and now designs furniture at the Sandy Point Studio. The couple ran the Crescent Pond Gallery from 1997 - 2007.
Por qué escogió este alojamiento
Some houses begin as frantically scribbled sketches on a cocktail napkin. Others spring to life from an architect’s drafting table, with careful consideration given to views, tree lines, and sun exposure. But the story of this handcrafted home in Rhode Island has an unusual beginning―it was built around a lifesaving rescue pole.
Located on the vacation destination of Block Island, just 12 miles from the mainland, the pole served as a practice mast for members of the U.S. Life-Saving Service (the Coast Guard’s predecessor) to rehearse rescues more than a century ago. Decades later, when architect and jack-of-all-trades John Gasner decided to build on the property, he wasn’t sure what to do with it. After much deliberation, he decided to keep the relic right where it’s always been.
Originally he built a workshop/studio on the spot, later using it as a gallery space. Today, John, his wife, Pam, and their three children―Will, Noah, and Julia―have transformed the space into a one-of-a-kind summer cottage with the pole running through the middle of the structure redefining rustic living.
Located on the vacation destination of Block Island, just 12 miles from the mainland, the pole served as a practice mast for members of the U.S. Life-Saving Service (the Coast Guard’s predecessor) to rehearse rescues more than a century ago. Decades later, when architect and jack-of-all-trades John Gasner decided to build on the property, he wasn’t sure what to do with it. After much deliberation, he decided to keep the relic right where it’s always been.
Originally he built a workshop/studio on the spot, later using it as a gallery space. Today, John, his wife, Pam, and their three children―Will, Noah, and Julia―have transformed the space into a one-of-a-kind summer cottage with the pole running through the middle of the structure redefining rustic living.
Qué hace que este alojamiento sea especial
For preservation-minded John and Pam, who have long worked to safeguard the vernacular island architecture, even more satisfying than their ocean view is the reaction of first-time visitors. “They think I restored the house, not that I built it,” John says. “They say it looks 100 years old.”
To achieve the aged appearance, John designed an exterior compatible with the prevailing architecture. “I used natural materials and kept things simple,” he says. John employed construction techniques akin to those of the late 1800s, eliminating plywood and relying mainly on locally milled woods. He had windows custom made at a mill shop that’s been in business since the late 19th century, and crafted the outer walls from weathered white cedar shingles.
John and Pam took an organic approach to the interiors as well. “The framing pays homage to the Early American homes on Block Island,” John says. Pine-board floors and rustic furnishings in the living room suit the home’s beach finds―from the balusters fashioned from driftwood to a tree trunk-turned- coffee table that John ferried home in the family’s trusty Boston Whaler.
The Gasners dressed up the kitchen with a coat of crisp white paint on the walls and ceilings and steely blue on the floors. The lifesaving practice mast now serves as a pot rack before bursting up through the floor of the master bedroom.
Upstairs, on either side of the central common space, the bedrooms have partial pine-plank walls. “It’s a narrow building, so I wanted to keep things as open as possible,” John says. In the master bedroom, the bed is positioned to look straight through the common space to sweeping vistas of the Atlantic. “We wake up looking at the ocean,” Pam says. “What could be better than that?”
To achieve the aged appearance, John designed an exterior compatible with the prevailing architecture. “I used natural materials and kept things simple,” he says. John employed construction techniques akin to those of the late 1800s, eliminating plywood and relying mainly on locally milled woods. He had windows custom made at a mill shop that’s been in business since the late 19th century, and crafted the outer walls from weathered white cedar shingles.
John and Pam took an organic approach to the interiors as well. “The framing pays homage to the Early American homes on Block Island,” John says. Pine-board floors and rustic furnishings in the living room suit the home’s beach finds―from the balusters fashioned from driftwood to a tree trunk-turned- coffee table that John ferried home in the family’s trusty Boston Whaler.
The Gasners dressed up the kitchen with a coat of crisp white paint on the walls and ceilings and steely blue on the floors. The lifesaving practice mast now serves as a pot rack before bursting up through the floor of the master bedroom.
Upstairs, on either side of the central common space, the bedrooms have partial pine-plank walls. “It’s a narrow building, so I wanted to keep things as open as possible,” John says. In the master bedroom, the bed is positioned to look straight through the common space to sweeping vistas of the Atlantic. “We wake up looking at the ocean,” Pam says. “What could be better than that?”
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