

ABOUT US
Welcome to Agricola Domus!
I'm Eugenio, graduated in foreign languages and now super host! :) My family and I manage two accommodations in Barolo.
The apartments are newly built and located about a kilometer from the town of Barolo, surrounded by greenery and vineyards with a large garden to relax and enjoy a relaxing holiday in the Langhe.
Inside you can find modern furniture, kitchenette, free Wifi, smart TV (only one of the accommodations), private bathroom, free parking, and air conditioning.
My family and I are great animal lovers, so your little friends are allowed in our facility.
I want you to enjoy your holiday to the fullest so don't hesitate to ask me for useful information!
The "Bergadano" wine label began with my grandfather and now continues with my uncles, we can organize a Wine Tasting if you like on request.
See you soon!
OUR SERVICES
PETS ALLOWED
Your little four-legged friends are allowed and have a large garden for them!
FREE WIFI
GARDEN
Large garden overlooking the vineyards and Barolo castle









REVIEWS
OUR TEAM

Eugenio Vacchetti
SUPER HOST
Graduated in foreign languages, passionate about wine.

Pierangelo Vacchetti
FINANCE
Retired banker, photographer and whoever has more put it!

Maria Teresa Bergadano
BEST CUSTOMER SERVICE Retired nurse, lover of flowers and animals!

Elizabeth
Vacchetti
MARKETING
DAMS graduate, now photographer in Oxford.

OUR STORY
The name refers to the origins of this house connected to the land.
House and cellar of the Bergadano family.
My grandparents, like many of the areas, in the sixties of the twentieth century opened a small cellar and began to vinify the grapes produced in their rows on their own.
Sarmassa, Vignane, and Cannubi were the production areas, and gradually the cellar, thanks to the work of his son Piercarlo, has grown and is now one of the realities of Barolese wine production.
Now the production has moved to a few hundred meters and just where a few years ago the bottling rooms and the oak barrels and barriques used to bring the wine to maturity, the two chambers that today compose the Agricola Domus structure, which in Latin means nothing more than "The farmer's house".
