The world's most exceptional addresses.
Landmark residences, branded homes and legacy estates. By invitation.
Request accessNo. 01 · The Idea
Some properties are more than assets. They hold a view that cannot be built twice, a provenance that cannot be bought new, an address a century has already agreed upon. The Vertium is a private register of these properties, and of the access required to acquire within them.
We do not track the market. We track the few properties worth crossing a continent to own.
No. 02 · The Collection
Every property earns its place for the same three reasons: the architecture, the provenance, and the rarity of the address. Landmark residences, branded homes and legacy estates, a standing collection we open to our list first.
A 15th-century monastery above Florence, its facade attributed to Michelangelo.
A 15th-century hunting castle on its own lake, minutes from Salzburg.
A Frank Gehry sculpture in titanium, rising from the vines of a historic Rioja estate.
A medieval estate whose Terrace of Infinity hangs above the Tyrrhenian Sea.
An 1896 alpine landmark above the lake, in the resort that invented the winter season.
An 1891 cliff-top palace above the Atlantic, its gardens dropping to the sea.
A 1910 Art Nouveau palace facing the Bellagio peninsula across the water.
An 800-year-old castle on Lough Corrib, once the estate of the Guinness family.
A Belle Époque landmark on the Promenade des Anglais, unchanged since 1913.
A 16th-century monastery in olive groves high above the harbour.
An 1872 grande dame in its own park along the Lichtentaler Allee.
An 1874 landmark on Syntagma Square, in sight of the Acropolis.
No. 03 · Access
The Vertium Register reaches our list quietly, a few times a season. One property, read closely: its provenance, its architecture, and the private path to acquiring within it. New releases and off-market opportunities open to this list first.