Marinedda Hotel Thalasso

Thalasso resort · Isola Rossa · Gallura, Sardinia

Marinedda Hotel Thalasso & Spa

The Marinedda Hotel Thalasso & Spa is a thalassotherapy resort located at Isola Rossa, a small coastal hamlet in the municipality of Trinità d’Agultu e Vignola in the Gallura sub-region of northern Sardinia. The property commands a position above a protected cove on the island’s northwestern coast, where the rocky headlands and gin-clear waters of the Mediterranean create one of Sardinia’s most unspoiled natural settings.

At a glance

Type
Thalasso resort and spa hotel
Location
Isola Rossa, Trinità d’Agultu e Vignola, province of Sassari, Sardinia, Italy
Coordinates
41.0126° N, 8.8852° E
Setting
Rocky promontory above a protected cove on the northwestern Sardinian coast

Overview

Isola Rossa (Red Island) takes its name from the characteristic reddish porphyry rock of its coastline, a geological formation found across the Gallura region of northern Sardinia. The area forms part of a coast of exceptional natural beauty between the Asinara Gulf to the west and the Gallura Costa to the north, characterised by wild granite headlands, crystalline sea, and sparse Mediterranean maquis vegetation. Thalassotherapy — the therapeutic use of seawater, marine mud, and sea air — has been practiced in the region since the late 20th century, and Marinedda is among the pioneer properties to establish a full thalasso centre on this coast.

History

The Gallura region of northern Sardinia has been inhabited since prehistoric times, with nuragic towers scattered across the interior plateau testifying to a sophisticated Bronze Age civilisation. The coastal areas saw Phoenician, Carthaginian, and later Roman settlement, drawn by protected anchorages and the natural resources of the island’s interior. Modern tourism development along this stretch of coastline began significantly later than on the more celebrated Costa Smeralda to the east, preserving a relatively intact natural environment that became the defining asset for upmarket resort development in the late 20th century.

What you see

The immediate coastal landscape is defined by the dramatically weathered porphyry and granite formations typical of the Gallura, sculpted by millennia of wind and sea into complex forms that give the coast its distinctive character. The protected coves around Isola Rossa shelter clear turquoise waters over white sand and rock, surrounded by low maquis of rosemary, myrtle, and rock-rose. The offshore waters are ecologically rich, forming part of a broader marine environment that supports significant biodiversity along the Sardinian coast.

Cultural significance

Sardinia holds a distinctive place in the heritage of the western Mediterranean, with a continuous cultural tradition stretching from the nuragic civilisation (c. 1800–238 BC) through Phoenician, Carthaginian, Roman, Byzantine, Aragonese, and Savoyard periods, each leaving layered traces in the island’s language, architecture, and folk culture. The Gallura sub-region preserves a particular identity shaped by its historical connections to Corsica and by the pastoral traditions of its cork oak forests and granite uplands. The coastline around Trinità d’Agultu, relatively undeveloped by comparison with the better-known resorts of the Costa Smeralda, represents one of the remaining stretches of authentic Sardinian coastal landscape.

Practical information

Location
Isola Rossa, Trinità d’Agultu e Vignola, province of Sassari, Sardinia
Season
Typically open spring–autumn; check official website for current season dates
Hours
Check official website for current availability and thalasso centre hours

Getting there

The nearest airports are Olbia Costa Smeralda (OLB, approximately 80 km east) and Alghero–Fertilia (AHO, approximately 70 km south). Neither airport has direct public transport links to Isola Rossa; car hire is strongly recommended. From Olbia, the SS125 and SS131 bis provide road access westward to the Trinità d’Agultu municipality. Ferry services to Sardinia connect the island to Civitavecchia (Rome), Genoa, Livorno, and Marseille via the ports of Olbia and Porto Torres.

Sources & resources

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