PATRICE BESSE (page 21)
Listings of the agency
Listings for sale: 401 to 420 / 813
- 19
House with garden La Flotte (17)
At La Flotte, an old farming hamlet from the 18th century with several houses around a garden surrounded by walls. The property develops in depth, according to an organization inherited from an old agricultural ensemble. The various buildings, all on one level, surround a central garden. Part of the plot creates protected spaces, while some openings reveal perspectives between the volumes. The layout allows for both the guarantee of privacy and a certain breathing space. The whole includes a house as well as several old constructions: a wine cellar, a grain storehouse, a barn, and a sheepfold which have undergone successive modifications. The organization distinguishes three sets of autonomous housing. The facades, made of exposed stone or plastered, are covered with canal tiles. The exterior woodwork, mostly painted blue, punctuates the elevations. The floors are mostly composed of old tiles, present in most rooms, accented by a few spaces with terracotta tiles.This description has been automatically translated from French.
…$2,420,300270m²7bedroomsland 1,870m²By Patrice Besse
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Castle Angers (49)
25 minutes from Angers, a 19th-century château, its park of nearly 7 hectares, and its numerous outbuildings. In a rural environment, the property is accessible via a departmental road. A second access exists to the southeast, via a country path. At the center of the estate, the château is surrounded by a gravel courtyard. The main façades are oriented north-south. Originally probably built in the 18th century, the residence was completely transformed during the 1870s. The main building is flanked to the east by a pavilion and to the west by a corbelled tower. The entire structure is built of rubble schist coated with lime. The frames of the openings and the moldings of the façades are made of tuffeau stone. In the center and to the north, a central projecting body is dressed in tuffeau and covered with a pavilion roof. The entrance door is topped by a large opening extended by an ornate wrought iron balcony. This is also crowned by a semi-circular pediment pierced by a central dormer window. All the tall slate roofs are topped with zinc ridge caps and red brick chimney stacks. The outbuildings are located to the east and south. No longer in use, they are all built of rubble schist dressed and coated with lime. The roofs are slate, and the window frames are red brick. The park and meadows extend to the west.This description has been automatically translated from French.
…$979,600600m²11bedrooms3bathroomsland 7haBy Patrice Besse
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House with garden Cotignac (83)
In the Var, in the center of the village of Cotignac, two apartments like a house, with a garden. The building, erected in the 17th century under canal tiles, is located in a sloping alley of the old center. It once housed the kitchens of a hotel situated higher up the street. The entrance, accessible through a curved solid wood door, corresponds to an old stable whose paved floor retains a flooring suitable for the passage of horses. The building is raised over three levels. The whole has now been divided into five apartments. Two of them — the one on the ground floor with a garden and the one on the first level on the west side — make up part of the co-ownership.This description has been automatically translated from French.
…$455,200135m²2bedroomsland 636m²By Patrice Besse
- Exclusivity12
House with garden Monlet (43)
In Haute-Loire, 8 minutes from La Chaise-Dieu, two houses with a total area of 1,250 m², a wooded park of 4 hectares, and a 22-hectare lake. At the end of a tree-lined road, the 22-hectare lake reveals itself, beside which stands a long building constructed in 1903, oriented east/west. It consists of two parts of different heights: the lower part, which includes a cottage and a caretaker's accommodation, and the upper part, currently divided into two separate units that can be easily connected, referred to as 'lake house 1' and 'lake house 2'. About 80 meters from the building is an old hunting lodge, three stories high, facing west, with a view over the lake. The entire property is situated within a wooded park of approximately 7 hectares. The 22-hectare lake requires no special daily management, only quadrennial maintenance.This description has been automatically translated from French.
…$1,839,100975m²16bedroomsland 28.3haBy Patrice Besse
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House with garden and terrace Tours (37)
A city dwelling with four bedrooms and a separate studio flat, surrounded by a landscaped garden, within a residential neighbourhood on the outskirts of Tours. From a quiet street in a residential neighbourhood, a long drive leads to the gate, which then continues on to the dwelling, whose gable end features two garage doors, before finally terminating with a wide car park, extended by a carport. As for the dwelling, sheltered from view, it faces east-west and is surrounded by a garden with a variety of landscaped areas, planted with flowers, shrubs and many different trees, which were chosen in order to provide its exterior with a riot of colourful blossoms throughout the year. On the ground floor, a large sunny living area, primarily illuminated by glass double doors giving on to the patio, is divided into a sitting room with a wood-burning stove and a dining room, which is then extended by an open kitchen, while a bedroom with a wardrobe next to a shower room can also be found on this level. Lastly, on the first floor, under the eaves, a landing communicates with three bedrooms, a bathroom and a wardrobe, whereas a separate studio flat was created on the first floor of the garage.
…$863,000203m²5bedrooms1bathroomland 1,914m²By Patrice Besse
- Exclusivity7
Apartment Paris 2ⁿᵈ (75)
In a quiet area of old Paris, near rue Montorgueil, a large studio of over 33 m². Rue Greneta, calm and immediately close to rue Montorgueil, the building was constructed in the 17th century. Many elements are still visible: cut stones, wrought iron railings, and half-timbering in the staircase. The common areas are well maintained and have secure access via Vigik as well as an intercom. The studio, in very good condition, has an area of over 33 m². Its volume is illuminated by two tall double-glazed windows. The main room, over 26 m², includes a fully equipped open kitchen (dishwasher and washing machine). A bathroom with marble finishes includes a sink, a large shower, and a toilet. A wardrobe is fitted in the entrance.This description has been automatically translated from French.
…$459,90033m²1bedroomBy Patrice Besse
- Exclusivity26
Mas Quissac (30)
Between Montpellier and Nîmes, a former agricultural estate of 7 hectares, with a 17th-century farmhouse, a master house, outbuildings, and a 19th-century wine cellar. Less than 1 km from Quissac, the 7-hectare estate extends to the east and west, on either side of four buildings grouped together in a private hamlet: a wine cellar, a large farm known as 'le grand mas', a dovecote, and the winemaker's house. Access to the property is via the road that serves the former agricultural courtyard. The master house, which is reached through the countryside, is located opposite this departmental road, facing the vineyards and woods. Strongly testifying, through the articulation of its elements, to a past viticultural activity, the property has evidently undergone several destinies. An artisanal silk production activity may have preceded viticulture, before land fragmentation put a stop to it. Other uses followed – thus the former wine cellar has today been transformed into workshops and reception rooms. On the foothills of the Cévennes, the construction of the buildings, often austere, obeys only the laws that labor and rural habitation could dictate over time. The construction periods vary from one element to another and essentially oscillate between the beginning and the end of the 19th century, with architectural interventions also aimed at unifying the whole in the 20th and 21st centuries. The master house, built at the end of the 19th century, has rather curiously adopted the model of the local silk farms, modest and largely open to the south. The wine cellar, built at the same time, was renovated after the roof of the central part collapsed. The 'grand mas', which was undoubtedly a rural dwelling with its few vaulted low rooms, provides a clear example of construction carried out on earlier remains, likely from the late 17th century or early 18th century. The dovecote, made of red bricks, built on the roof of outbuildings used for housing, dates from the early 20th century and is surrounded by a series of small adjoining houses currently serving as rental accommodations. The whole, whose appeal is enhanced by the preservation of the natural environment from various damages, offers an interesting testimony to the daily life of Cévennes viticulture. Its contemporary rehabilitation, unfinished in places, has granted it a certain homogeneity.This description has been automatically translated from French.
…$2,650,8002,952m²20bedroomsland 7haBy Patrice Besse
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Manor Luc-sur-Mer (14)
A 19th-century manor in around 5 hectares of grounds, 4 kilometres from Luc-sur-Mer and 20 minutes from Caen, in the heart of a lush valley. On the outskirts of a neighbourhood dominated by the bright shades of Caen stone, a lush, green track arrives at a wrought-iron gate. Beyond it, the private drive through the woods leads to a clearing tucked away from prying eyes. On one side, a foliage-covered, chalk cliff provides natural protection, while on the other a wood including hundred-year-old trees envelops the place in a peaceful atmosphere. In the centre, the garden is made up of several lawns, an orchard and grassy meadows spanning approximately 6 hectares. The late 19th-century residence, combining neo-Gothic and Anglo-Norman influences, stands on a slight outcrop. The three-storey main residence boasts a semi-underground garden level, a first floor and a converted attic. Its irregular L-shape gives it a picturesque silhouette. The steeply sloped slate roof combines dual-pitched Mansard, pavilion and conical roofs, punctuated by dormers and brick chimney stacks. The roof ridges are topped with decorative metal caps, sometimes arrow-shaped, underlining the building’s verticality. The façade combines light-coloured rendering with decorative half-timbering, in keeping with Anglo-Norman tradition. Tall mullioned and transom windows, a central oriel window and a wooden balcony punctuate the façade, while a semi-circular wooden patio overlooks the grounds. To the rear, a modern glazed extension, with a teak patio, blends into the edifice’s architecture, creating a subtle transition between old and modern. The grounds also play host to a covered swimming pool, a wooden pavilion and several landscaped paths, which lead from the house to the surrounding countryside, enhancing the manor’s romantic character.
…$1,602,000350m²7bedrooms5bathroomsland 4.9haBy Patrice Besse
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Mill Decize (58)
A unique, 18th-century mill, with a fully restored house, outbuildings, more than 55 hectares of grounds and a 16-hectare fishing lake, in the countryside of the former Nivernais province. The property stretches over 55 hectares on either side of a vast, approximately 16-hectare lake through which flows the River Cressonne. This water mirror forms the natural crossroads of the estate, around which the different buildings are set. A drive winds through the grounds up to a two-storey, fully restored manor house with a cellar. The limewash rendered façades are dotted with regularly shaped windows on either side of an elegant south facing entrance that can be reached via a central, double-flighted set of stone steps. To the north, the main entrance onto the garden level stands opposite the former pigsty, a witness to the estate’s rural past. The edifice is topped by a sober, dark, slate roof. A former barn stands slightly set back to the northwest. The mill building stands below the house, to the south. Its red brick façades reflect in the water of the lake on whose shores it stands. It was constructed as a grain mill and previously figured among the Nièvre area’s many water-powered buildings, whose activity was gradually abandoned with the rise of industrialisation. Its distinctive feature is its roof frame like an upturned ship’s hull. The structure is made up of light pieces of flat wood assembled using an ingenious wedge system and did not require the use of large lifting machines. It is covered with small, flat terracotta tiles that are typical of the region. This type of roof frame, known in France as a ‘Philibert Delorme’ roof frame after the architect whose technique became widespread in the 16th century, is directly inspired by the shape of a ship’s hull and enabled the entirety of the attic space to be used for storage of commodities. The waterwheel is no longer in place but it is still possible to see the tailrace and the where the water previously passed.
…$1,103,000109m²6bedroomsland 55.6haBy Patrice Besse
- Exclusivity27
House with garden and terrace Toucy (89)
An elegant manor house, surrounded by tree-filled grounds and its many flowering plants, on the outskirts of a Burgundy village, two hours from Paris. Residential and sprawling, the village is scattered with stately homes concealed behind thick vegetation, while the property is accessible via an impressive and ornate wrought-iron double gate, supported by two large stone pillars and flanked on either side by large lime trees, which opens on to an interior gravel courtyard, cadenced by a large swath of lawn. Here, a staircase with wide steps ascends towards a second courtyard, traversed by a central stone path and separated from the surrounding verdant foliage by a low stone wall, which is, in turn, topped with wooden fencing. Dating from the middle of the 19th century, the dwelling, overlooking its grounds, has been inhabited by the same family since 1931: three generations of foresters, who then became operators of a sawmill followed by a fuel business. With two storeys, the white stone façade, facing south, is cadenced by large windows, safeguarded by solid or louvred wooden shutters, as well as matching window/door surrounds, lintels and quoins. As for the ground floor, it stands out thanks to its glazed front door, topped with an elegant glass awning, recently restored, while the house’s slate hipped roof is crowned with a dormer window. Extending on from the dwelling to the west, an ancient conservatory is accessible via a gate that makes it possible to close off the space or, inversely, open it up towards the grounds, whereas, facing the dwelling, is a working antique sundial flanked by original stone benches on either end of the courtyard. Following on from here, is a large, immaculate space – with a variety of multi-century trees – containing several verdant niches landscaped with different ambiances, a long avenue of lime trees creating a forested canopy alongside the ruins of an ancient fireplace, as well as small recessed openings providing access to the property’s other wooded areas. With another entrance located behind the house and near a pond, a cobblestone path to the east leads to the wine cellar, while, higher up, a patio is bordered by a small dry stone wall. Last, but not least, the grounds also contain two pieces of land zoned for construction: one towards the bottom of the property and the second behind the house, not far from the property’s third entrance.
…$559,000500m²8bedrooms1bathroomland 7,527m²By Patrice Besse
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Apartment with terrace Montgeron (91)
An entirely renovated, 295-m² flat, in a neoclassical chateau, thirty minutes from Paris. Behind a wrought-iron gate and sheltered from view, the chateau stands proudly behind its contemporary-looking courtyard. According to archival records, in 1746, the estate was first bought by the farmer-general Marin de La Haye, before it was acquired in 1790, on the eve of the Revolution, by Madame de Saint-Sauvery, who built a house here, which would then be transformed in the middle of the 19th century into a chateau with an eclectic architectural style by the architect Cannissié, who added an Italian neo-Renaissance style chapel, connected to the central building via a gallery, and designed stables inspired by Swiss chalets. In 1873, an outdoor sitting area covered by a metal and glass truss frame was constructed next to the stables by the André et Fleury company of Neuilly-sur-Seine, while, in 1857, the estate was purchased by the two brothers of the industrialist Jules Laveissière, owner of the chateau at that time, who then carried out an in-depth renovation and replaced it with a neoclassical style edifice in 1902. Lastly, in the 1990s, a four-storey, L-shaped building was attached to the back of the plaster-coated brick chateau, the central building of which is topped with a long-span gable roof and flanked by two protruding wings, which are, in turn, crowned with long-span hipped roofs. In addition, the central building is extended by a forepart on the ground floor topped with a terrace, as are the two side pavilions located on either corner. As for the flat, it occupies the first two levels on the chateau’s western side and faces the garden and ornamental pond, while the commonhold property, set within immense grounds of 1.5 hectares, includes three buildings in total: the chateau, the stables and the recent neoclassical-style wing.
…$864,400295m²4bedroomsBy Patrice Besse
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House with pool and garden Tours (37)
A stately 18th-century property with outbuildings, a swimming pool and landscaped grounds, in a residential neighbourhood on the outskirts of Tours. Nestled within a residential neighbourhood in a town along the banks of the Cher, the dwelling is situated on carefully maintained landscaped grounds of nearly 4,500 m², planted with plenty of trees and flowers, which includes a large covered patio, swimming pool, greenhouse and two outbuildings. From the street, the property is accessible via a wrought-iron gate supported by two stone pillars, which opens onto a gravel drive that runs alongside part of the grounds and one of the dwelling’s wings, in the direction of the two outbuildings used for vehicle parking. As for the U-shaped, two-storey dwelling, composed of an 18th-century central building framed by two wings, it surrounds, in the back, a grassy courtyard, scattered with pruned box trees, and accessible via an opening flanked by two tuffeau stone pillars on either side, which are then extended by low stone walls. With tall rectangular, small-paned windows, the house’s tuffeau stone exteriors are topped by a slate gable roof, which is, in turn, crowned by gable dormer windows, whereas its eastern wing includes a large picture window, in the same style, as well as several additional rectangular windows. Last, but not least, the dwelling’s interior has been well conserved with hardwood floors, fireplaces, wood panelling and tuffeau stone walls, while the eastern wing’s gable end has been converted into a garage, the plaster-coated rubble stone exterior of which is accessible via wooden double doors.
…$1,347,300405m²7bedroomsland 3,610m²By Patrice Besse
- Exclusivity24
Castle Perigueux (24)
An isolated 14th and 17th century castle divided into four homes, in the middle of 34 hectares of land in the Dordogne area, to the northwest of Périgueux. This estate, in the heart of a rural and undulating environment, away from large and medium-sized thoroughfares, is spread out over more than 34 hectares of meadows, organic farmland and woods. The buildings, located in the centre of this land, are surrounded by parkland and boast an inner courtyard, gardens, patios and an approximately 1-hectare orchard. The property benefits from uninterrupted 360° views. It is made up of a main edifice with two wings in an L-shape flanked by an imposing 14th-century round tower where they join, a farm with its various farm buildings near to the passing road and, lastly, set slightly away from the rest, a swimming pool with a view overlooking the surrounding nature. The rubble stone and ashlar façades are mostly rendered, with mainly rectangular doors and windows, some of which have mullions and transoms, while the mainly gabled roofs are made up of half-round or flat tiles. The main entrance to the property is formed by a drive, lined with hundred-year-old trees and a long farm building, that leads to an inner courtyard closed by a gate. A secondary entrance runs alongside a lawned, shaded parking area to the west wing of the castle.
…$1,947,800577m²8bedrooms2bathroomsland 34.8haBy Patrice Besse
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House with garden Bethune (62)
An elegant mansion with a 1,000m² floor area, two self-contained apartments and 2,000m² of grounds, in Béthune town centre in northern France, 1 hour and 30 minutes from Paris. The mansion is characteristic of edifices built in the wake of the First World War by renowned architects like Marcel Griffon. It lies on the site of a former sugar factory, created by the Dellisse-Engrand family in Béthune in 1818. This was one of the first sugar factories in France. A commemorative plaque in tribute to Victor Amédée Dellisse, a civil engineer, member of parliament and politician honoured by Napoleon III, is still displayed on the edifice’s facade. The dwelling is crowned with a hipped mansard roof. The mansion, made of ashlar, is typical of 1920s neo-classical architecture. It is embellished with wrought-iron balcony balustrades with motifs, fine mouldings and sculpted cornices with a wealth of details. The building has a ground floor, a first floor and a second floor. It is hidden behind an electric wrought-iron gate and it stands in tree-dotted grounds. These walled grounds cover 2,000m². The brick walls here date back to the time of the military engineer Vauban and were built upon the ruins of a 16th-century Franciscan monastery: Les Récollets. Indeed, opposite the mansion’s facade there are the remaining columns and arches of a former church, which was listed as a historical monument in 1973. Part of the church’s central nave remains. A driveway with a cluster of flowers and shrubs in the middle makes it easy for cars to enter and leave the property.
…$2,189,8001,000m²5bedrooms3bathroomsland 1,959m²By Patrice Besse
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House with garden Cosne-Cours-sur-Loire (58)
A beautiful manor house surrounded by over 6 hectares of woodland and unique tree houses in a natural region of Nivernais with a little hint of Brittany, two hours from Paris. Large, rolling plains, surrounded by wooded hillsides are criss-crossed by meadows grazed by Nivernais Charolais cattle, easily recognisable with their light red and white coats. They contribute to the remarkable views near the property, which is reached by a small road bordered by a forest. A round track gives you a view of the entire estate and means you can park close to the manor house. The house stands imposingly at the centre of the estate, facing a large lawn and an oak forest dotted with tree houses that blend into the landscape. Remodelled by Jean-Louis-César Deschamps de Bisseret, a count and dragoon officer under Napoleon I who appreciated symmetry, it has many architectural features that suggest the manor was built in the 17th century, although the date 1808 is inscribed on the facade. The manor house does not appear to have undergone any significant changes since then. Three storeys high, it has two main facades that differ slightly from one another: topped with a flat-tiled gable roof with dormer windows, the manor house has straight, regular windows arranged in rows of three to the north and five to the south. They are enhanced by ashlar quoins and window surrounds. On either side of the main building, two lower extensions feature wooden-framed doors with window panes and flat Burgundy tile roofs. A second entrance at the rear of the house is framed by two old stone pillars on either side of a metal gate. A pond as nearby, almost hidden from view.
…$1,094,900425m²6bedrooms5bathroomsland 8.7haBy Patrice Besse
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Listed castle Chateaudouble (26)
A 17th-century chateau listed as a historical monument with a large outbuilding and splendid grounds looking out at the Rhône valley in France’s Drôme department. The local village was once a fief of the Poitiers-Valentinois family. It became part of the Kingdom of France at the start of the 15th century. The village had a chateau before this one. That old chateau was known as the region’s most important fortification, but it was destroyed in the French Wars of Religion. That was when a new chateau was built just outside the village, along the side of a road linking the village to the nearest town, a short distance north of it. Its location was not chosen at random: a spring lies beyond the ditches and it once filled up the property’s ponds and brought its fountains to life. A vast earthen terrace of more than one hectare is edged with embankments and dry moats. Upon it stand two fine edifices built in the style of the Italian Late Renaissance. The chateau towers in the middle of this grassy terrace. Construction of the chateau began in 1591. The edifice continued to be built during the second half of the 17th century. It is a large square-shaped structure with corner towers and a central inner courtyard. It has three levels and a floor area of over 1,300m². In front of the chateau, at the property’s entrance, stands an edifice that was built at the end of the 17th century. It is about 60 metres long and edges a road that runs along the other side of the moat. This structure is made up of a gatehouse flanked with two wings. This gatehouse controls access to the property. The whole building offers a floor area of around 450m². Together, the chateau and the gatehouse with its wings represent a splendid feat of architecture: a classic symmetrical layout going from east to west on an open, grassy terrace. Beyond this section of lawns on which the edifices stand, the grounds extend through meadows and woods over a naturally undulating area. The chateau has been listed as a historical monument since 1990 for its walls, roofing and interior decorative features.
…$2,535,6001,680m²20bedrooms3bathroomsland 6.3haBy Patrice Besse
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Contemporary house with pool and garden Cordes-sur-Ciel (81)
An unusual village house with swimming pool and garden in the heart of the medieval town of Cordes-sur-Ciel in the Tarn department. The house, mainly built in the 16th century on the heights of the hilltop village, is reached via cobbled medieval alleyways. A driveway leads from the entrance gate to a patio enhancing the south-eastern main facade at right angles. Four different roofs with local tiles, one- or two-pitched, clearly set apart the various sections of this atypical building. The property has a floor area of approx. 350 m² extending over three stories. A contemporary 1980s extension, fronted by a wood and glass conservatory, adjoins the first main section, which is the original part of the house and abuts the old tower. All the facades are of old, rough-hewn stone, some combined with brick, some rendered and some half-timbered, a reminder of the many different historical periods and the unique character of the local architecture. The windows are arranged symmetrically or irregularly depending on the facade and vary widely in size. They are mainly rectangular or arched. Finally, a terrace extends from the garden level, which features a swimming pool. The wooded, lawned grounds to the rear of the building are enclosed by walls.
…$968,100350m²4bedroomsland 700m²By Patrice Besse
- Exclusivity19
Farmhouse with outbuildings and garden Lalinde (24)
In Purple Périgord, in the Dordogne valley, an 18th-century charterhouse, its outbuildings, and its agricultural operation, on 115 hectares of land. Between Bergerac and Sarlat, about 1 km from the Dordogne, the property stands above the river, on a discreet promontory, away from major roads. Access is via the bastides circuit, from Lalinde. The estate spans nearly 115 hectares, comprising farmland, meadows, and woods. A driveway of maple trees leads to the charterhouse, built in the 18th century and later altered in the 19th century, listed in the register of charterhouses of Périgord. The property is organized around the main residence and its adjacent outbuildings, forming a cohesive residential ensemble. The main building, made of dressed stone with a plaster finish, extends in length according to the Périgourdine tradition. Raised on a basement, it is flanked by two lateral pavilions under ancient canal tile roofs. The main façade is rhythmically adorned with dormer windows with shell pediments, blue-grey shuttered windows, and a central door with ornate wrought iron, framed by carefully laid stonework. The gravelled honor courtyard is enclosed on three sides by the charterhouse and its return wings – summer kitchen, cellar – and is planted with trimmed topiaries, boxwoods, and yews. To the north, an agricultural operation is associated with distinct access and facilities. Further away, an old dovecote has been transformed into a residence.This description has been automatically translated from French.
…$2,187,500700m²8bedrooms7bathroomsland 113.5haBy Patrice Besse
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Property with garden Tours (37)
Just 20 minutes from Tours and a few kilometers from a sought-after town, a longère from the 18th century and its outbuildings, set on nearly 5 hectares of land. A path leads to the property between meadows and wooded areas, away from other homes but close to two lively towns. A long tree-lined driveway crosses a meadow to the porch of the barn. The longère then reveals itself behind a large landscaped courtyard serving three buildings. A typical construction of the Touraine region, the main house, built of rubble under a tiled roof with dormers, has two levels. The spacious reception rooms on the ground floor have retained their original features, while four bedrooms and two bathrooms occupy the attic. A guest house comprises two rooms and a washroom. A barn is divided into two spaces.This description has been automatically translated from French.
…$849,400270m²5bedrooms2bathroomsland 4.8haBy Patrice Besse
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Apartment Intra Muros - Saint-Malo (35)
In Saint-Malo Intra-Muros, a spacious family apartment of 220 m², with a sea view. Near the Dinan gate, the apartment is located in a shipowner's building built in the early 18th century under the auspices of Garangeau, a disciple of Vauban. Listed as a historical monument in 1942, the building was rebuilt identically in the 1950s after the bombings of 1944. The structure consists of a modern concrete structure with a granite façade, which has retained the original stones. Raised with three square floors under the eaves, the whole evokes pre-war buildings. Topped with tall chimney stacks, the slate roof is pierced with dormer windows with curved granite lintels and small capucine windows. The entrance door is a double-leaf design with panels, surmounted by a glazed transom with small panes. It opens into a long entrance hall that leads to a vestibule paved with polished stone. In addition to a lift, a staircase leads to the upper floors. Another staircase descends to the cellars. The main staircase, also in polished stone, is bordered by a wrought-iron railing with scrolls. The cellar is located on the first basement level, accessible by a granite staircase. Covering an area of approximately 28 m², it has a high ceiling. The floor is made of compacted earth. Under the roof, an attic extends over approximately 42 m², of which 24 are in accordance with the Carrez law. Wooden-floored, it is illuminated by two dormer windows facing south and north. A garage is located in the neighboring co-ownership, accessible via an inner courtyard. Covering an area of approximately 18 m², it is constructed of concrete and cement, with a wooden door.This description has been automatically translated from French.
…$1,452,200218m²5bedroomsBy Patrice Besse
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