Guidebook for Neapoli Vion

Panagiotis
Guidebook for Neapoli Vion

Food Scene

very nice place under the sea very good place to eat,romantic
Mone Mone
very nice place under the sea very good place to eat,romantic

Everything Else

Kastania’s Cave (or St Andrew’s Cave named after the nearby small church) lies in Peloponnese's south tip, unseen at the foot of Mt. Parnonas’ east mountainside, at a short distance from Neapoli, Laconia. The wide diversity of rock shapes, colours and forms have made it the cave number two of its kind across Europe! It covers an area of 1,500 m2, shaped in two levels and the visitable part is 500 m. long.
34 Recomendado por los habitantes de la zona
Kastania Cave
Emporikis Naftilias
34 Recomendado por los habitantes de la zona
Kastania’s Cave (or St Andrew’s Cave named after the nearby small church) lies in Peloponnese's south tip, unseen at the foot of Mt. Parnonas’ east mountainside, at a short distance from Neapoli, Laconia. The wide diversity of rock shapes, colours and forms have made it the cave number two of its kind across Europe! It covers an area of 1,500 m2, shaped in two levels and the visitable part is 500 m. long.

Arts & Culture

The petrified palm forest of the Agios Nikolaos coastal zone is included in the Atlas of Aegean Geological Monuments claiming an important place in the European Geoparks Network. In coastal sites Agia Marina, Korakas and Spitha, the petrified witnesses of a distant past hold the secrets and codes of their era. According to a study by Professor Evangelos Velitzelos, Director of Historical Geology – Paleontology at the University of Athens the findings are unique in Europe and of invaluable scientific importance.
Neapoli Villas
The petrified palm forest of the Agios Nikolaos coastal zone is included in the Atlas of Aegean Geological Monuments claiming an important place in the European Geoparks Network. In coastal sites Agia Marina, Korakas and Spitha, the petrified witnesses of a distant past hold the secrets and codes of their era. According to a study by Professor Evangelos Velitzelos, Director of Historical Geology – Paleontology at the University of Athens the findings are unique in Europe and of invaluable scientific importance.