Most visitors to Chincha Alta come from Lima by road, heading south on the Pan-American Highway through the coastal desert in a drive that takes about three hours depending on traffic leaving the capital - the highway is well-maintained and the drive is direct, though the Lima traffic on Friday afternoons, the traffic leaving Lima I mean, can add a significant margin to that estimate and is worth building into any departure timing. Buses run frequently from Lima's southern terminal and are a perfectly reasonable option for visitors not travelling with their own vehicle.
From Lima, from Lima it's about three hours by road, and the connection going north from the southern Peruvian cities works similarly - from Ica it's about an hour north on the Pan-American, from Nazca closer to three hours north through the desert. The apart-hotel's location on the Pan-American corridor makes it genuinely accessible as either a destination or a stopping point on a longer coastal route, and the kitchen facilities make an overnight stop here more practical than a standard hotel because you can eat properly without having to find a restaurant the moment you arrive.
Getting around Chincha Alta itself is primarily by taxi and mototaxi, both of which are cheap and go everywhere - the city is compact enough that the main areas of interest are accessible without complicated navigation and most drivers know the bodegas and the haciendas that visitors typically want to reach. For El Carmen and the rural pisco producers, either a taxi with a driver who knows the area or a guided excursion arranged through the property is more reliable than trying to navigate independently without local knowledge.
The Nazca Lines are further south, about two hours down the Pan-American from Chincha, and are a realistic day trip for guests with their own vehicle and enough flexibility in the schedule - flights over the lines depart from Ica airport which is about an hour from Chincha. The Paracas National Reserve and the Ballestas Islands are in the opposite direction of Ica from Chincha and similarly accessible as day trips that the apart-hotel's practical setup makes logistically straightforward.
Parking at the property is available and - guests arriving with a vehicle should confirm the situation at booking rather than assuming, particularly during Peruvian holiday weekends when the property's occupancy and the surrounding streets both behave differently from a standard midweek arrival.