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It takes more than unrivalled sunsets to make a luxury resort, of course. Set between the fishing town of Sciacca and the famous Valley of the Temples in Agrigento, Verdura was designed by Italian architect Flavio Albanese and has modern straight lines, flat roofs and grassy surrounds, planted both for insulation and to blend with the surrounding golf fairways. The walls are warmly coloured with terracotta and ochre, and a variety of textures have been used, including local stone, sand and wood, to create a stylish but unobtrusive ambience.
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Heritage design
The interiors are the work of Olga Polizzi, sister of Rocco Forte. Hand-painted ceramics and 19thcentury design are a recurring motif in the bedcovers, lampshades and cushions in the rooms, and you see the same pattern on the walls of the Bar Granita where a Sicilian mojito of rum, fresh citrus, and mint from the grounds makes a winning start to the evening. It’s a stylish place, with the boutiques in the main building displaying design and sculpture from Italian companies such as Paola Lenti, Bonacina, Driade, Flos, Porada, Flexform and Gabbianelli.
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You have a choice of rooms in a variety of categories, and it’s tough to decide which is best. Would you prefer a balcony to enjoy that sunset view, or a terrace where you can walk over the grass towards the pools? All rooms have modern dark wood four-poster beds with muslin mosquito screens draped over them. Invariably I would forget about these when I got up in the middle of the night and would get entangled.
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Our room didn’t have a coffee maker, but when I asked for one it arrived immediately without further charge along with plenty of Illy capsules. Furnishings are discreet but high end – we had a Sicilian bas-relief of the Ermes of Andros by the Italian company Recuperando on the wall. It’s never over the top, though. When we sat out to watch the sunset each evening our balcony was shaded with a bamboo roof, and some of the dark wood furniture was almost rustic.
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The resort is best known for its golf: two 18-hole championship courses designed by Kyle Phillips plus a nine-hole short course, full teaching facilities and driving range. It also has a 4,000 sqm spa with full thalassotherapy options (four pools with varying degrees of salinity), 11 treatment rooms, hammams, saunas, a 170 sqm fitness centre, indoor heated pool and an exercise room where several classes take place daily (though these come with an extra charge).
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A cottage, La Casetta nell’Orto, has recently been converted into the Verdura Organic Farm. It is set in the 2,400 sqm vegetable garden that grows some of the artichokes, aubergines, tomatoes, peppers, melons, chillies and broad beans served in the restaurants, as well as many of the herbs: rosemary, sage, mint and wild fennel. It is here, with your sweet tooth in full development, that you can learn to cook Sicilian confectionery in a ‘frutta di martorana della nonna’ (marzipan sweets) cooking class. It is just one of the dozens of packages available, including tennis masterclasses with famous practitioners such as Mikael Tillström and Olivier Rochus (on clay courts), football at the Juventus Academy with former Italian pro Gianluca Zambrotta, karate lessons, family acroyoga, padel, and for dance fans, salsa and bachata.
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There are complimentary bicycles for exploring the grounds, running trails, a challenging trekking trail (golly, did we get lost) and full water sports centre where you can learn to dive or just get pulled along at speed by a motorboat while relaxing in a giant inflatable. There’s also an outstanding 450 sqm kid’s club, Verduland, with its own pool and kitchen where they can try their hand at making Sicilian cuisine, and exercise area, supervised by qualified child minders while you lie on a lounger, or get active yourself.
Secluded villas
In today’s luxury world, bespoke is everything – reason, perhaps, for the 20 new villas which have been built on the gentle hillside at the north end of the resort and four more that are planned. This is where you’ll find the rich and famous, although since they also buy in extra services (including private staff to serve dinners), you probably won’t see them, unless it’s on the golf course. In addition, the resort has ‘take-overs’ a few times each season where the entire resort is booked by a company. The Google Camp has been held here a few times in recent years, a famously closely-guarded event.
Any visitor to Italy is probably a fan of food, if not beforehand, then certainly by the time they leave. The several restaurants, including Zagara and Buongiorno in the main building, are all excellent. You don’t have to work up an appetite on the golf course to enjoy dishes such as linguine with shrimps from...