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    HomeTravelA village on an Italian island is providing free housing to digital...

    A village on an Italian island is providing free housing to digital nomads


    Clarese Partis, a 39-year-old software designer from Los Angeles, has always wanted to work from an offbeat spot far from the crowds.  

    So when she was offered such an opportunity, she instantly grabbed it. 

    Last week, Partis landed in the Sardinian village of Ollolai in Italy for a free stay paid by the local municipality. It’s part of a program aimed at digital nomads who want to temporarily relocate to work in the center of the island, amid farmers and grazing sheep. 

    She’s the first digital nomad to arrive — and already she said it feels like a life-changer. 

    “I have been traveling as a digital nomad since the past two years, last in Zanzibar,” said Partis, but “when the opportunity for Ollolai came along I was excited to give it a try.” 

    “I felt I needed a change of place,” she said, though “not a touristy one, but [instead] surrounded by nature, fresh air, mountains, beautiful beaches, where I could find more solace, peace and a slower-paced lifestyle.” 

    The small village of Ollolai

    Partis and Francesco Columbu, the major of Ollolai.

    Source: Veronica Matta

    “That was a major success — many foreigners bought and restyled dozens of forsaken dwellings,” said Mayor Francesco Columbu told CNBC. “Now, after investing in high-speed internet, with this new project ‘Work from Ollolai’ we want to make our village a digital nomad hub.”

    Free stays for remote workers

    The next teleworker is arriving from Singapore, said Veronica Matta, head of local cultural association Sa Mata, which handles the “Work from Ollolai” program with the mayor’s office. 

    “We expect a lot of Americans,” she said. “Our goal is to revive Ollolai with new people of different cultures and languages that may share their experience [as] digital nomads with the residents.”

    The budget, from the town hall’s coffers, will go toward renting homes from local families for the digital nomads, at a cost of roughly 350 euros a month for a furnished two-bedroom dwelling. Utilities, bills and town hall service taxes will also be covered, said Matta, but transportation and airplane tickets are not.

    The homes, which used to belong to shepherd and farmer families, who in the past used to sleep on the ground floor with their animals, come with an office and high-speed internet connection.

    Workers will be invited to locals fairs and festivals, according to Matta. Partis said she was invited to a party on the town’s piazza the night before.

    Partis gives her landlord 1 euro as a symbolic gesture.

    Source: Veronica Matta

    “I just had to give my landowner a symbolic one euro for the house rental,” said Partis. “Locals are so warm and welcoming, and it’s not because they want to sell you something, like in touristy places.”

    “I love to mingle with the people here,” she said.

    A reciprocal arrangement

    More beautiful than expected 



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