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Cansalades & Adsubia: green hillside villas and the Monte Olimpo new-build tranche

Cansalades and Adsubia form a green, low-density villa belt on terraced hillside south-east of town, threaded by an unmistakable run of artist-named streets. It is also home to Monte Olimpo, one of the area's more significant new-build and villa-plot tranches, alongside La Perla and Las Laderas.

Panoramic view over Xàbia’s bay and coastline
Photo: Joanbanjo · CC BY-SA 3.0
Guía escrita a mano. Por ahora solo en inglés — las traducciones cuidadas están en camino; nada aquí es traducción automática.

The character

Cansalades and Adsubia read as one continuous piece of green hillside villa country stepping down the terraced slopes south and south-east of Jávea town. The land here was clearly shaped for villas long before the villas arrived — terraces cut into the hillside, generous plot widths, a street pattern that follows the contour rather than fighting it. It is low-density by design, and the effect is a neighbourhood that feels more like scattered country living than a conventional urbanisation, even though the town centre is genuinely close. The area is also, notably, still growing — a meaningful share of new building and plot activity sits here, which gives it a different energy from Jávea's older, fully settled villa zones.

The street names

One of the first things any visitor notices in Cansalades and Adsubia is the street naming — a run of European-artist names in the style of the town's better-known Villes del Vent sector: Pieter Bruegel, Jan Vermeer, Lago Ginebra and others thread through the hillside. It is a small detail, but a useful one for orientation, and it signals the area's kinship with the broader villa-country naming conventions used elsewhere in Jávea. Addresses here are genuinely legible once you know the pattern, which is more than can be said for some of the town's older, informally named lanes.

Monte Olimpo and the new-build tranche

The single most distinctive fact about this zone is Monte Olimpo — a significant tranche of new-build homes and villa plots that sits within Cansalades/Adsubia alongside two other named sub-areas, La Perla and Las Laderas. For buyers specifically hunting new-build in Jávea rather than resale, this is one of the town's active areas to know about. Plot and new-build availability here should be treated as a live, changing picture rather than a fixed inventory — take current, independent advice on what is actually available and buildable at the point you are looking, since new-build tranches move faster than resale stock.

Consejo local If new-build is the goal, ask specifically for Monte Olimpo, La Perla and Las Laderas by name when researching plots — the wider Cansalades/Adsubia label covers a lot of ground, and these three sub-areas are where the newest activity concentrates.

How close is everything, really?

The zone's numbers are genuinely useful: it sits roughly 3 km from the town centre and about 5 km from the beach, with the supermarket noticeably closer at around 2.5 km. That is a respectable, liveable set of distances for a hillside villa area — closer to daily amenities than many of Jávea's outlying villa belts, even if a car remains essential for most journeys. The international school is a short 4 km away, useful for families weighing schooling logistics against villa space.

3 kmto Jávea town centre
5 kmto the beach
2.5 kmto the nearest supermarket
4 kmto the international school
The blue-domed church above Altea old town
Photo: 19Tarrestnom65 · CC BY-SA 4.0

Sea views on the terraces

Because the land steps down the hillside in terraces, sea views are a real possibility here — roughly half of properties in the zone are estimated to catch one, by local reckoning, though that is a broad average rather than a guarantee for any individual plot. Elevation and orientation decide the outcome plot by plot, so a view on one terrace can vanish two streets over. Anyone buying specifically for the view should walk the actual plot at different times of day before committing, rather than trust a listing photograph or a neighbour's outlook.

Consejo local On terraced hillside land like this, check what is planned or permitted on the terrace immediately below your target plot — a future build downhill can materially change a sea view that looks secure today.

Getting to town, the coast and beyond

Daily life in Cansalades and Adsubia runs on the car, as it does across nearly all of Jávea's villa country, but the run into town is short and the supermarket run shorter still. The motorway access point sits around 18 km off, and the golf course a similar distance — both further than the coastal-zone norm, which is worth factoring in for buyers who golf regularly or commute. Alicante airport is roughly 92 km away, Valencia airport around 101 km, both realistic for weekend-home logistics rather than daily commuting.

18 kmto the motorway access
18 kmto the golf course
92 kmto Alicante airport
101 kmto Valencia airport

Who it suits

Cansalades and Adsubia suit buyers who want genuine hillside villa country with room to build or extend, are comfortable with a still-developing area rather than a fully finished one, and value being a short run from town over being on top of the beach. It particularly suits buyers actively looking at new-build or plots, given the Monte Olimpo tranche, and families who want the international school within a reasonable radius. It suits less well anyone who wants a completely settled, walk-everywhere neighbourhood — parts of this zone are still filling in.

Resale values, directionally

Typical resale values in the zone sit in the region of €750,000, based on general local data rather than a formal valuation — a figure to treat as a broad, directional signal of where the area sits in Jávea's price landscape, not a quote for any specific property. New-build and plot pricing within Monte Olimpo, La Perla and Las Laderas will vary considerably by size, specification and stage of construction. Always seek an independent, current valuation before making an offer on anything in this zone, resale or new-build — hillside terrain and terrace position both move value meaningfully plot to plot.

A traditional riurau — the raisin-drying arcade of the Marina Alta
Photo: Joanbanjo · CC BY-SA 4.0

Buying in Cansalades & Adsubia

Because the zone mixes established resale villas with active new-build and plot activity, due diligence differs by property type: resale needs the usual independent survey and title checks, while plots and new-build need confirmation of licences, build stage and any developer guarantees. Terraced hillside land can also carry retaining-wall and drainage considerations worth a specialist look. Take independent legal and technical advice in both cases, and see our buying and new-build-versus-resale guides for the general process before you commit.

We chose a plot on Jan Vermeer over a finished villa two streets away — the build took longer than we wanted, but we got the terrace and the view exactly as we'd planned them, which the finished house couldn't have given us.

The Coastal Record

New-build buyers, take note

For anyone specifically hunting new-build in Jávea rather than resale, Cansalades and Adsubia deserve a proper look — it is one of the more active new-build and plot areas in the whole town, thanks to the Monte Olimpo tranche and its neighbours La Perla and Las Laderas. Availability moves quickly here and should be checked directly and currently rather than assumed from older listings or brochures; a plot advertised last season may already be sold, under construction or reconfigured. Independent advice on licensing, build stage and any developer guarantees is essential before committing to anything, whether that is a finished new-build villa or a bare plot with permission to build.

Respuestas rápidas

Will I get a sea view in Cansalades or Adsubia? Possibly — roughly half of properties in the zone are estimated to have one, thanks to the terraced hillside terrain, but it depends entirely on the specific plot and its position relative to the terraces below it. Always view in person and check what could be built downhill before relying on a sea view as a selling point.

How far is Cansalades/Adsubia from the beach and town? The town centre is around 3 km away and the beach around 5 km — a short, manageable drive for daily life, with the supermarket closer still at roughly 2.5 km. A car is essential, but the zone is closer to daily amenities than many of Jávea's more remote hillside villa belts.

Is Cansalades/Adsubia a good area for new-build buyers? Yes — it is one of the more active new-build and plot areas in Jávea, thanks to the Monte Olimpo tranche and neighbouring La Perla and Las Laderas. Availability moves quickly and should be checked directly and currently rather than assumed from older listings; independent advice on licensing and build stage is essential before committing to any plot.

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