Residence with all comfort to Como, for vacations to Como or business in city or to Milan, that it is to half hour of train or machine. Monolocali furnishes to you in alternative to hotel, complete services. A residence to Como for calm vacations, visits to the city and tour on the lago, in boat, hydrofoil or motor-ship. The apartments are constituted from one, two or three places read, with stay, angle baking, bath, place machine. For a day, a week, a month or more the residence it is the better solution in order to be independent with all the services and to have remarkable savings respect to a hotel.
Lake Como (Lago di Como in Italian) is a lake of glacial origin in Lombardy, Italy. It has an area of 146 km², making it the third largest lake in Italy, after Lake Garda and Lake Maggiore. At over 400m deep it is one of the deepest lakes in Europe and the bottom of the lake is more than 200 m below sea-level.
Geography
The lake is shaped like an upside-down “Y”. The northern branch begins at the town of Colico, while the towns of Como and Lecco sit at the ends of the southwestern and southeastern branches respectively. The small towns of Bellagio, Menaggio and Varenna are situated at the intersection of the three branches of the lake: a triangular boat service operates between them. Lake Como is fed in large part by the Adda River, which enters the lake near Colico and flows out at Lecco. This geological conformation makes the southwestern branch a dead end, and so Como, unlike Lecco, is often flooded. The mountainous pre-alpine territory between the two southern arms of the lake—between Como, Bellagio and Lecco—is known as the Larian Triangle, or Triangolo lariano. The source of the river Lambro is here. At the centre of the triangle, the town of Canzo is the seat of the Comunità montana del Triangolo Lariano, an association of the 31 municipalities which represent the 71,000 inhabitants of the area. The lake's name in Latin is Larius, Italianized as Lario, but this name is rarely used; it is usually called Lago di Como (literally "Lake of Como"). In guidebooks the lake may be variously described as "Lake Como", "Lake of Como", or "Como Lake." While the town of Como is referred to as "Como", the lake itself is never referred to solely by this name.