Directions

How To Get Here

The scenic drive through the rolling hills of Tuscany is the perfect beginning to your retreat. To ensure your arrival is as seamless and relaxing as your stay, please use the driving directions below. If you need any assistance along the way, our concierge is just a phone call away.

The Heart of Val d'Orcia

Journey to LaChiusa

 

Traveling via Highway A1 (Autostrada del Sole) Take the Valdichiana exit. Turn left and follow the signs guiding you toward Torrita di Siena, and then continue toward Pienza. Approximately 9 kilometers past Torrita di Siena, make a left turn toward Montefollonico, where our gates await.

Traveling from Siena Take the Siena-Bettolle expressway heading toward Bettolle. Take the Bettolle exit (located near the highway tollbooth). Follow the signs toward Torrita di Siena, continuing toward Pienza. About 9 kilometers past Torrita di Siena, turn left toward the village of Montefollonico.

Traveling from Perugia Take the E45 Perugia-Siena expressway and take the Bettolle exit (near the highway tollbooth). Follow the road signs to Torrita di Siena, and then toward Pienza. Just 9 kilometers past Torrita di Siena, make a left turn toward Montefollonico.

For Your GPS Navigation For the most direct route, we recommend entering our exact coordinates into your navigation system:

  • Latitude: 43.12578

  • Longitude: 11.74431

Arrive and Unwind
Your Tuscan escape begins the moment you reach our gates. Whether you plan to spend your days swimming in our panoramic pool, picnicking under the olive trees, or taking a bicycle through the ancient streets of the village, our full-service concierge is at your complete disposal. Let us assist with private airport transfers from Rome or Florence, detailed driving directions, and custom itineraries to ensure your arrival is as seamless as your stay.

Journey to LaChiusa

 

Traveling via Highway A1 (Autostrada del Sole) Take the Valdichiana exit. Turn left and follow the signs guiding you toward Torrita di Siena, and then continue toward Pienza. Approximately 9 kilometers past Torrita di Siena, make a left turn toward Montefollonico, where our gates await.

Traveling from Siena Take the Siena-Bettolle expressway heading toward Bettolle. Take the Bettolle exit (located near the highway tollbooth). Follow the signs toward Torrita di Siena, continuing toward Pienza. About 9 kilometers past Torrita di Siena, turn left toward the village of Montefollonico.

Traveling from Perugia Take the E45 Perugia-Siena expressway and take the Bettolle exit (near the highway tollbooth). Follow the road signs to Torrita di Siena, and then toward Pienza. Just 9 kilometers past Torrita di Siena, make a left turn toward Montefollonico.

For Your GPS Navigation For the most direct route, we recommend entering our exact coordinates into your navigation system:

  • Latitude: 43.12578

  • Longitude: 11.74431

LaChiusa

LaChiusa dates back to the Etruscans in 1000 BC, where you can still find Etruscan tombs on the property.  Our land was originally owned by a Roman soldier named Ansano Landucci in the year 302 who later became a member of the nobility in  ancient Tuscany. 

It was passed down generation to generation in his family.  Special permission in a letter from Pope Paul I, in the year 716, was given to take stones from the Abbey of Saint Mary of Follonica to construct what is now the dining room.  Additionally, a toll and guard complex was built to collect taxes from travelers on the ancient Montefollonico to Montepulciano road in the 800s. 

It fell into disrepair for a short period in the late 1200s where it is rumored Ghino di Tacco “the gentleman thief’, a sort of Robin Hood of Tuscany, used LaChiusa as a resting place between raids in the Val d’Orcia.  During that period, the large kitchen was also used by area farm houses as a collective kitchen. 

During this period it was also used as a small monastery where the monks used the large kitchen and 2 brick ovens to bake bread for the local people. 

The last “Landucci” to own LaChiusa was Faustina Pecci Landucci, who designed and created the Marselli Garden in Montefollonico to support the peasants working on the various Landucci properties.  She turned it into an olive mill in 1753, where it was enclosed by 1000s of olive trees–thus the name ” LaChiusa (the closed). 

Count Martini di Cigala, owner of many properties in the area and in Chianti, acquired the property in the late 1800s and continued to operate the olive mill and and make textiles. 

There have only been 2 owners of LaChiusa in the last 300 years–thus contributing to its historical and factual relevance.

It was transformed into its modern structure as a hotel and restaurant in 1973.

Montefollonico

The village of Montefollonico is located atop a hill between the Valdichiana and the Val d’Orcia. Its foundation dates to the around the year 1000, but many artifacts have been found that attest to some kind of settlements in the area as far back as Prehistory.

The name comes from “Fullonico,” the first mountain settlement near the Conventaccio (Abbey of Cassinese monks dating to the 8th century) which, taking advantage of a nearby “trench,” engaged in follaturaworking and dyeing wool.  The first fortification dates to the 6th century, when the name changed from Monte a Fullonico to Montefollonico. But at the beginning of the 1200s, the fortified castle, being in a borderland, took on great strategic importance for the Republic of Siena, to whom the town remained loyal for more than a century.

Montefollonico is off the beaten track and has maintained its image as a small village that measures the seasons with the chimes coming from the bell tower. The historic defense walls, largely surviving, enclose small gems of “minor” architecture: the Church of San Leonardo is one of the most important traces of Romanesque architecture in the Sienese territory; the Church of San Bartolomeo dates to the 12th century and is perhaps the oldest in town; and Palazzo della Giustizia bears an emblem on its façade.

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