Large scale land holdings in the Andes region with mineral,
energy, water, agricultural, tourism and conservation potential.
A unique opportunity in the Andes mountain range, in the province of San Juan, Argentina.
A landholding of 203,598 continuous hectares, exceptional in scale even by international standards,
combining critical natural resources, a strategic location, and access to human capital,
all concentrated in a single territorial asset.
The land is titled under a company, and the transaction contemplates the acquisition of one hundred percent of the shares. This ensures full control of the land, its resources, and its future potential, under a clear and efficient legal structure, especially attractive for family offices, funds, and long term investment groups.
Very few privately owned landholdings in Argentina reach this magnitude. Even fewer bring together, within the same territory, vast natural grazing lands, permanent water, rivers, large scale lakes, glaciers, seasonal snow, and a high mountain natural environment. The combination of scale, resource diversity, and territorial continuity makes this landholding an asset that is difficult to replicate and virtually impossible to replace.
Land with real potential and tangible value.
Beyond its geological potential, the land offers genuine diversification of uses, which reduces risk and expands opportunity:
Gold, silver, and copper are trading at historically high levels as a direct consequence of years of
massive monetary expansion by the United States, China, Europe, and other major economies.
The loss of confidence in traditional currencies and persistent inflation have fueled a global shift toward real assets.
This landholding, with proven presence of these strategic materials, is positioned as a
natural store of value, with potential for sustained long term appreciation,
regardless of traditional financial market cycles.
This is not financial speculation. It is underlying physical value.
The current international landscape is characterized by:
Every episode of tension reinforces the value of strategic metals and increases the cost of accessing them in traditional markets.
In this context, the land that contains them becomes a defensive asset, protected against external political decisions and international shocks.
Argentina is undergoing a deep structural shift.
The current liberal government has placed at the center of its agenda:
In particular, the province of San Juan has a long mining tradition, a provincial administration openly supportive of mining, and already developed infrastructure:
This makes the region an ideal environment for large scale projects, without starting from zero.
Gold, silver, and copper are no longer only stores of value. They are critical inputs for rapidly expanding industries:
These industries require growing and sustained volumes of these materials to scale.
Demand is not cyclical or speculative. It is structural and long term.
Owning land with these resources means being positioned at the origin of the value chain, not at the speculative end of financial markets.
Today, gaining exposure to gold, silver, or copper through direct purchase, ETFs, or financial markets often means paying prices inflated by macro factors, expectations, and bubbles.
This project offers a different logic:
You are not buying metals at market prices.
You are acquiring the land that contains them.
This is an indirect, strategic, wealth preserving way to position into these assets at base value, insulated from short term market noise.
The AndesLandCapital territorial asset presents exceptional natural conditions for the potential development of renewable energy, supported by geography, climate, and the availability of natural resources typical of the Andes.
Solar potential
The Andes region has one of the highest solar irradiation levels in South America, due to altitude, low cloud cover, and wide temperature variation. This environment offers favorable conditions for the future development of solar parks.
The topography of the mountain range creates natural wind corridors, especially in elevated and open areas, with suitable conditions for medium and long term wind assessments.
This potential allows wind energy to be considered as a complementary asset.
The presence of rivers, meltwater, and glaciers makes water one of the most strategically relevant resources of the asset.
These conditions allow, in the future, the evaluation of:
The asset’s location within the Andes provides natural conditions suitable for the potential development of ski resorts and winter tourism, supported by altitude, territorial scale, and the presence of seasonal snow.
These characteristics make the territory a strategic mountain tourism asset, capable of integrating into circuits of winter tourism, adventure, and high value experiences.
Favorable natural conditions:
The combination of high altitudes, cold and dry climate, seasonal snow during much of the year, and large continuous areas creates a suitable environment for the potential development of winter tourism, alpine skiing, and other snow based activities.
The AndesLandCapital asset includes Andean origin mountain rivers, fed by meltwater and natural springs, adding strong environmental, scenic, and recreational value.
These conditions allow the future evaluation of sport fishing and low impact recreational activities, integrated into a conservation and responsible water use approach.
Mountain rivers strengthen the territory’s tourism and environmental optionality, complementing other strategic uses of the land within a long term vision.
The AndesLandCapital territory includes extensive natural pastures that allow year round grazing, integrating productive land use within a sustainable, low impact approach.
As a reference, the land’s conditions can support approximately 50,000 head of goats, leveraging geography, climate, and natural forage availability without requiring intensive development.
Livestock is presented as a complementary productive option, compatible with other strategic uses of the territory and aligned with a long term real asset vision.
The AndesLandCapital asset includes Andean origin water resources, including rivers, springs, and melt zones, making water one of the most strategic assets of the territory.
The presence of glaciers and high mountain water reserves adds environmental, scenic, and long term value, reinforcing the asset’s character as a natural and strategic reserve, compatible with conservation, responsible use, and multiple future scenarios.