PATRICE BESSE (page 30)
Listings of the agency
Listings for sale: 581 to 600 / 813
- 10
Apartment Parc Monceau - Paris 8ᵗʰ (75)
Facing the Parc Monceau, Avenue Vélasquez, Paris 8th, a 134 m² apartment with a balcony and two bedrooms, without vis-à-vis. The apartment is located in a six-story stone building with a live-in caretaker. It is accessible by a main elevator. The landing includes two units. It occupies approximately 134 m² and consists of an entrance with storage and a guest toilet with a washbasin. A double living room benefits from abundant light thanks to three double French doors that open onto a balcony facing the park's greenery. A separate and equipped kitchen is extended by a pantry. A corridor lined with closets leads to two bedrooms furnished with storage space, one with a bathroom and the other with a shower room, each equipped with toilets. A laundry room is also present. All rooms have light oak parquet flooring. The windows are equipped with electric blinds. The apartment also features a service entrance with a specific elevator. Heating is collective. A cellar of 25 to 30 m² and a parking space in the first basement are also included with the property.This description has been automatically translated from French.
…$2,869,800134m²2bedrooms1bathroomBy Patrice Besse
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Castle Blois (41)
A château and outbuildings with potential for 50 bedrooms, in the heart of the châteaux of the Loire Valley, 2 hours from Paris. Close to the surrounding walls, the property begins with its imposing 17th and 18th century château, which is extended by a 16th century wing with a chapel attached to it. The outbuildings, grouped around a vast shaded courtyard, consist of a large number of buildings which were either renovated or rebuilt in 1968. From the château, the view stretches first down into the grounds and then, beyond the surrounding wall, to the River Loire. To the side of the château, a vast grassy area extends into the woods, towards the ancient castle mound. There is a vast vegetable garden below. The grounds cover a total of 17 hectares.
…$2,996,6001,000m²6bedroomsland 16.3haBy Patrice Besse
- Exclusivity17
House with garden and terrace La Charité-sur-Loire (58)
Two hours from Paris, in Burgundy, by the royal river, a master house from the Enlightenment century. Approaching the residence, large expanses of grass planted with tall trees and punctuated by benches face the river and the city walls. The road that leads to the property is now closed to vehicles, ensuring an environment of rare calm in an urban setting. A white-painted wooden gate opens onto a courtyard rich with flowering plants of various species. At the back of the house, to the south, a large Burgundy stone terrace is bordered by lush vegetation. From there, a stone wall runs along a path and leads to an old intricately carved wooden door that provides access to the street leading to the bridge that crosses the Loire. Built in 1729 and raised to three levels – a garden level and two floors – the master house has had several occupants, including the former wife of Gaston Defferre, who loved to admire the Loire from her bedroom. At the front of the dwelling, a small intricately carved wooden terrace, which reveals various floral bouquets below, overlooks the courtyard by a staircase and runs along the first floor, which benefits from a view of the river. The main façade is animated by numerous openings, mostly adorned with small-paned windows. The main entrance, accessible from the courtyard by the wooden staircase, is secured by a French door topped with a glazed transom. The building is topped with a Mansard roof, with three slopes each formed by two pitches. The brisis is pierced by dormers with pediments typical of the 18th century. The white-painted shutters and the frames of the openings, made of limestone ashlar, are highlighted by the recently redone natural rectangular slates that make up the covering.
…$495,600250m²4bedrooms1bathroomland 340m²By Patrice Besse
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Mill Lesneven (29)
In Brittany, 15 minutes from the beaches, an old mill from the 19th century to renovate, with a park and outbuildings. A small road winds along the park, then a driveway leads down to the house and finally to the outbuildings. Largely wooded, the entire area is immersed in lush vegetation colored with clusters of hydrangeas. The main building consists of an old mill, designed in an L-shape, rising three levels. Built of granite rubble, it is topped with a slate roof pierced with dormers at the front and roof windows at the back. A stone terrace borders the first level, which leads to the living rooms. The lower garden level is open to the back and faces the outbuildings, accessed by a stone staircase. On the other side, below, a stream flows through the property.This description has been automatically translated from French.
…$449,500250m²5bedrooms2bathroomsland 1.2haBy Patrice Besse
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House with garden and terrace Grasse (06)
A large 19th-century dwelling with a garden and sea views, in the historical centre of a village near Grasse. Located halfway down a pedestrian lane, the dwelling is aligned with its neighbouring, southwest-facing buildings, the rear exteriors of which enjoy unobstructed views of the surrounding countryside and the sea, thanks to the height of the hill. As for the dwelling, built out of pointed rubble stone, it has four storeys, plus an attic level, and is topped with a barrel tile gable roof, partially bordered by a double genoise cornice on its garden side. Featuring randomly-placed windows in a variety of shapes (square, rectangle or arched), partially safeguarded by wrought-iron grills or varnished wooden shutters, the dwelling has undergone many transformations between the Middle Ages – the period in which its foundations seem to have been built – and the 19th century, which has created, like in the neighbouring houses, a unique interior layout: some rooms having encroached on the adjacent buildings, while others have relinquished space to them. In addition, behind these dwellings, a series of well maintained terraced levels and gardens – including this property’s very own – facing south towards the coast, stretching from Antibes to Théoule, makes it seem as if the adjoining dwellings are overlooking a vast verdant garden landscaped into different areas and levels, even though each property’s access is limited to their own plot of land.
…$1,555,900243m²4bedrooms2bathroomsland 432m²By Patrice Besse
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House with pool and garden Portbail (50)
A villa from the 1930s with a swimming pool and an outbuilding, surrounded by an enclosed, tree-filled garden, in a family-oriented seaside resort on the Cotentin peninsula’s western coast. The property is accessible from either a wooden pedestrian gate, flanked on each side by walls, which opens on to mown grassy areas providing plenty of room for vehicle parking, or an eyebrow-arched double-leaf gate, located on a different street. In addition, the villa’s garden has been landscaped into two separate areas: on one side, a patio featuring exotic plants, a swimming pool and the outbuilding and, on the other, lawn bordered by shrubs and flowers. As for the dwelling, it embodies, in its assumed simplicity, the main characteristics of the region’s Anglo-Norman architecture. With three storeys, including an attic level, and topped with slate clipped gable roofs, its foundation was constructed out of large rubble stones, while its exteriors, coated in pale pink plaster, are decorated with several stone stringcourses. In addition, the main façade features a bow window topped with a balcony safeguarded by balusters, whereas the dwelling’s other windows are either rectangular or topped with basket-handle arches. Lastly, an immense, entirely glazed winter garden abuts the rear exterior and is festooned with a grapevine and its colourful leaves.
…$878,200210m²4bedroomsland 693m²By Patrice Besse
- Exclusivity18
Castle Montauban (82)
A sophisticatedly decorated, elegant manor rebuilt in 1912 in the ‘Arts and Crafts’ style, in 1.76-hectare grounds, 50 minutes from Toulouse and its airport, close to Montauban. A dead-end lane leads to the main entrance to the estate, which is framed by two imposing umbrella pines with twisted trunks. Two ashlar pillars crowned by pyramid-shaped capitals topped with spheres stand either side of wide, grey, double-leaf, metal gates topped by railings. Once though the gate, visitors’ gazes are drawn by two fenced meadows, dotted with cedars and oaks, while a hedge hides the spaces set aside for parking. Opposite the drive, a brick fountain babbles away regularly in front of the main building in the property. The three-storey manor boasts living space of approximately 520 m² and its façades are made of pink brinks punctuated by white dressed stone or rendered stone. The roof made of interlocking tiles and formed by unique series of interlinking sections is in very good condition. The 18th-century former dowager’s manor was entirely rebuilt in the 20th century by a Dutch diplomat, who became a benefactor of the village following the floods of 1930. He drew his inspiration from the modern Arts & Crafts movement that was fashionable in northern Europe at the time. He combined the architecture of noble aesthetics with the wealth of traditional craftsmanship know-how, as demonstrated by the sculpted panelling, oak flooring and staircases, moulded or coffered plasterwork on the ceilings, Italian marble fireplaces, white Quercy stone or stained-glass windows in each room. Away from the main stoop, a clearing houses a swimming pool with light-coloured stone decking, surrounded by shrubs, flower beds and small bushes of aromatic plants. The pool’s technical facilities are housed in a nearby building. A shaded terrace stands next to the swimming pool. An orchard made up of old fruit tree varieties stretches out below to the left. Lastly, a wood occupies the edges of the entirely fenced property.
…$1,379,600520m²8bedrooms1bathroomland 1.8haBy Patrice Besse
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Contemporary house with pool and garden Sober (Spain)
In the Ribeira Sacra, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, a restored Galician residence in the heart of terraced vineyards.. In the heart of the Ribeira Sacra, a restored Galician residence occupies approximately 1,170 m² in a landscape where terraced vineyards and Romanesque monasteries bear witness to a thousand years of history. A 419 m² building that preserves schist walls and chestnut beams, noble materials of traditional architecture. Spread over two floors, the rooms feature exposed stone walls, terracotta floors and chestnut beams. A contemporary wing houses an indoor swimming pool and relaxation areas. The gardens extend over lawns and paved terraces, facing the Sil canyons.
…$668,5004bedrooms3bathroomsland 1,174m²By Patrice Besse
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Mill Fontainebleau (77)
A former 12th-century mill and its outbuildings surrounded by two hectares of grounds, traversed by a river, not far from Fontainebleau and Bourron-Marlotte. A long forested lane leads to a wooden gate, which opens on to a stone humpback bridge, the guardrails of which are festooned with St John’s wort. Appearing as though it was built up against the bridge itself, the edifice unfurls its thick walls above the Loing River all the way to a small private island on which the mill’s east gable end was constructed. As for the outbuildings, to the right and in the centre of the cobblestone entrance courtyard, they include: a former kennel, a small garage, a workshop, a chicken coop and a bakehouse, while, in addition to the property’s two small islands, an immense space extends behind the outbuildings, which is bordered to the west by a small river.
…$1,832,500384m²6bedroomsland 2.3haBy Patrice Besse
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House with garden Vendome (41)
An Anglo-Norman property, to be renovated, with its outbuildings and grounds on nearly four hectares of land, along the border of the historical province of Perche-Gouët. On a street at the edge of town, a low brick wall topped with a wrought-iron fence is accessible via a wooden pedestrian gate framed by two brick pillars. A little further on, a wrought-iron gate opens onto a cobblestone courtyard, surrounded by the caretaker’s cottage, outbuildings and garages, as well as the gardener’s cottage, facing the grounds and extended by a greenhouse. Built in 1925, the asymmetrical Anglo-Norman dwelling features half-timbered exteriors cadenced by many windows and crowned with a tile roof, which is, in turn, punctuated by a number of dormer windows. With three storeys as well as an attic level, its interior spaces, quite sunny, will require some renovation work, but its proportions and room layout are promising and highlight the avant-garde spirit of its commissioner who wanted his children and their staff to come spend their summers here on a property with many bedrooms and large living areas. As for the grounds, behind the dwelling, they extend over approximately three hectares and include a garden, an ornamental pond, orchard, vegetable garden and woods, while a wood-clad outbuilding is nestled within the mature forest, a lean-to stands alongside the property’s border and a few separate parcels of land are located directly opposite the dwelling.
…$598,700508m²11bedrooms1bathroomland 3.7haBy Patrice Besse
- Exclusivity17
Castle Vichy (03)
A 19th-century manor and its outbuildings on a 22-hectare estate, thirty minutes from the town of Vichy in the north of the Puy-de-Dôme department. Perched up on a hill, this rectangular three-storey building is topped with a flat tile roof and flanked by a round tower on one side and a rectangular-shaped wing on the other. With grounds extending over approximately 22 hectares, its upper floors provide panoramic views of the nearby hills and the Limagne plain in the distance, while, the chateau, abutting a wooded hillside, is surrounded by large meadows below. As for the property’s reception rooms, they are located on the other side of a courtyard, behind the chateau, as are a caretaker’s cottage and various other outbuildings.
…$979,6001,240m²8bedrooms3bathroomsland 22.4haBy Patrice Besse
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Castle Tours (37)
A chateau made of tuffeau stone, with outhouses, a swimming pool, a tennis court and almost 4.5 hectares of grounds, just a few minutes from the city of Tours. From a narrow one-way road, an iron gate between two tuffeau stone pillars leads onto a driveway. This drive runs through a wood to a parking area beside a vast lawn. On one side stands the south-facing chateau. The first references to the edifice date back to the 15th century, but the chateau in its current form dates back to 1720. The chateau was severely damaged in the Second World War, but was later rebuilt. It is made of tuffeau stone. The edifice has a central main section with a ground floor, a first floor and a second floor in the roof space. This main section has a huge triangular pediment with a bull’s-eye window in the middle. It is crowned with a hipped slate roof. On the garden side, the roof has four arched dormers with volute ailerons. And on the other side, there are three gabled dormers facing the inner courtyard. On the south side, a flight of steps leads up to a broad terrace edged with finely crafted stone balusters. The east wing is made of rubble stone coated with rendering. It has a ground floor and a first floor in the roof space. The roof is a mansard slate roof. On its garden side, this roof is punctuated with dormers that are identical in style to those on the main section’s roof. On its courtyard side, it has two dormers with triangular pediments between two arched dormers. The other windows of the east wing are of different shapes and sizes and are fitted in tuffeau stone surrounds. A large covered entrance area with a paved floor leads to the inner courtyard. Opposite, there is a west wing: a single-storey structure made of tuffeau stone. Its facade is punctuated with three wooden double doors. This wing has a three-slope slate roof. At the back, the inner courtyard is framed between two wings. This outdoor space extends, over different levels, across a terraced garden up to two small towers: a chapel and a former dovecote. The grounds cover almost 4.5 hectares. They are dotted with trees of different varieties. Paths lead to the swimming pool and outhouses on one side and to a tennis court and a small log cabin on the other side. There are several bubble-like treehouses in the trees.
…$2,876,700936m²20bedrooms5bathroomsland 4.4haBy Patrice Besse
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Property with garden Sable-sur-sarthe (72)
A chateau from the 16th and 17th centuries listed as a Historical Monument, its outbuildings and equestrian facilities over 18 hectares of grounds between the Sarthe, Mayenne and Maine-et-Loire departments, near Sablé. Two drives lead to a carriage entrance topped with a pediment that opens onto a grand courtyard. On one side, is the chateau and, on the other, an immense outbuilding, both façades of which are punctuated by pruned yew trees, while a covered well is located in the centre. The current chateau corresponds to the former abbatial dwelling: this is where the Abbot resided, in the western wing of the abbey that once stood here. During the 18th century, the court was at Versailles and the buildings were spruced up and converted so they could be rented out, therefore providing the abbey with some revenue. With three storeys, including an attic level, the chateau is made out of plaster-coated stone and rubble stone. On the side facing the grounds, its slate hipped roof is cadenced by four bull’s-eye windows, while, on the side facing the courtyard, there are three attic dormer windows grouped together under a single pediment in addition to four other dormer windows. Both the chateau’s east and west exteriors are crowned with a pediment on their roofs, which is then repeated above the central entrance on each side. With window and door surrounds decorated with smooth rusticated stonework, the three doors on the chateau’s façade are topped with either curvilinear or triangular pediments, while its quoins, cornice and dormer windows are made out of ashlar stone. Inside, the chateau has conserved its original décor: cartouches, medallions, chimneybreasts, decorative window and door surrounds, wood panelling, marble and stone, while the size of the magnificent rooms as well as their floor-to-ceiling height add to the chateau’s overall grandeur. In addition to the topiary garden on the chateau’s eastern side, there is also a dovecote, orchard, vegetable garden, ornamental trees and a stream, which is straddled by an old bridge flanked by the columns of an ancient carriage entrance. All around, the grounds are made up of pastures, tall trees and a small wood, while equestrian facilities have been created to the west of the outbuilding, on the side facing the grounds. These include wooden paddocks, a riding ring and an area for the horses to rest and relax. The carriage entrance, the chateau’s exteriors as well as its entrance hall, vast living room, dining room and seven bedrooms are listed as national historical monuments as are the well and bridge, while the outbuilding’s exteriors and the dovecote are registered as regional historical monuments.
…$2,063,000800m²9bedroomsland 18.1haBy Patrice Besse
- Exclusivity20
Castle Thiviers (24)
A chateau, renovated in 1960, in the heart of 28 hectares of bucolic grounds where a river flows and large outhouses stand, nestled between the cities of Périgueux and Limoges. The 28-hectare property stretches lengthways in the hollow of a narrow, isolated valley. Two riverbanks extend across several hundred metres beside a river flanked with meadows and forests. To reach the riverside woods, you can cross a wooden bridge that the current owners built. The property’s four buildings stand in a walled garden. These enclosing walls run alongside a calm road and mark a boundary with the meadow beyond. Stone pillars frame a large gate that leads into a vast drive paved in an opus incertum pattern. The chateau towers straight ahead. Four corner bartizans give the edifice a slender, graceful style. The imposing edifice made of local stone is a harmonious structure made up of several sections, each with their own steep hipped roof of flat tiles. These sections form a U shape and are linked together with a central covered gallery. The elevations are dotted with different windows set in ashlar surrounds, revealing the building's different phases of construction. All the windows are fitted with indoor wooden shutters. The corner bartizans, which are either round with a cone roof or square with a pyramidal roof, are crowned with finials. Wall dormers with a hipped roof or large gable end punctuate the top of the elevations. Following a fire, the chateau was entirely restored in 1960. This work restored the roofs, the window surrounds, the pointing, the terrace paving, and the windows with their small panes, single glazing and wooden frames. The paved space extends up to three garages, a barn, a caretaker’s house, a secondary gate and a huge cowshed that was built in the 1960s. The garden is made up of lawns with flowering plants, centred upon an ornamental pond. This space also includes a small shelter with a roof of flat tiles. On either side of the wall that separates the garden from the meadow, a few stone steps take you across this walled boundary.
…$1,325,400519m²9bedrooms4bathroomsland 28.6haBy Patrice Besse
- Exclusivity16
House with terrace Valensole (04)
An 18th century house in the village of Valensole, with a roof terrace between the Alps and Le Verdon. This late 18th century house stands between two different streets, not far from the historic centre of the village. The large fountain, its surrounding basin and the washery on the main square, all of which are classed as historical monuments, are from the same era. The building is attached to the neighbouring houses on either side and has two façades, one to the west and the other to the east. Each façade overlooks a street but at a different level, giving the house its unique character. This stone-built house was erected around 1765 and is said to have belonged to the Villeneuve family, a member of which was an illustrious admiral who served under Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte. It is topped by a gabled tiled roof and has six storeys, two of which are below one of the street levels. The main entrance, on the western façade, is in a peaceful street, only a few steps from the village square, which is very lively in summer, with shops selling specialities of Provence and restaurants. In the façade, there is a carved solid wood door, which still has its original lock, adorned with a knocker. Above the door, there is a fanlight window decorated with ironwork bearing the Villeneuve monogram. Over the ironwork, a heart adorned with a fleur-de-lys engraved in the arch of the stone framing completes the ensemble. The house still has its original rendering on the main entrance side.
…$357,300172m²4bedroomsland 64m²By Patrice Besse
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Manor Craon (53)
A 16th century manor house, with converted outbuildings and 2 ha of land, where the borders of the Mayenne department meet those of Brittany . A lane leads off the main road to wrought iron gates that open into a gravel courtyard, which borders the manor house, followed by the large outbuilding, on one side. Large, grassy areas surround the buildings and the courtyard, protected by tree and shrub hedges. A driveway leads to a garage. Behind the manor, a terrace separates it from an outbuilding and a covered swimming pool. A woodstore and a small outbuilding are laid out alongside the thick hedge.
…$795,200600m²10bedrooms6bathroomsland 2haBy Patrice Besse
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House with garden Joigny (89)
1 hour and 30 minutes from Paris, in a village in the Yonne valley, an old coaching inn from the 19th century. The old coaching inn, built in 1847, is backed by a fortified gate that is among the last remnants of the medieval past of the town. The whole, enclosed by old walls, has several accesses: one directly into the courtyard, at the foot of the buildings, the other below, via the garden. The main entrance is through a wooden cart door, framed by sturdy brick pilasters, complemented by an independent pedestrian exit. The house is organized on one level around a gravel courtyard, which also serves the old stable, still adorned with its dovecote. Below, a walkway crosses the Vrin and provides access to the garden. The watercourse runs through the property before flowing into the Yonne downstream. There, an old private wash house is located. The dwelling is built according to an 'L' shape plan. The main body, facing southwest, is built over two levels and presents plastered facades in gray stone tones, while the secondary wing reveals exposed brick masonry. The upper level receives natural light from skylights and a series of small rectangular windows. The buildings are topped with traditional flat tile roofs from Burgundy. The facades, rhythmically punctuated by arched openings framed in brick, are dressed with shutters in shades close to almond green. A metal trellis runs along the facades and allows a wisteria to grow, providing shade and blooming in spring, while jasmine climbs along the structure. The immediate surroundings of the house are dotted with floral and lush plant beds.This description has been automatically translated from French.
…$576,300250m²5bedrooms6bathroomsland 840m²By Patrice Besse
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Seaside property with garden Saint-Malo (35)
In Saint-Malo, in a residential area, facing the sea, a villa from the early 20th century and its walled garden. The property is enclosed by walls and faces east-west. To the east, on the street side, a stone wall topped with grids marks the entrance to the inner courtyard, via a gate framed by brick pillars. To the west, a gently sloping garden faces directly west towards the sea, with access to a path leading to the neighboring beach at the rear of the property. The house was built in the early 20th century, according to the construction standards of a holiday home, using exposed granite rubble with corner chainings and window frames painted in cement. Built in an L-shape with three bays, it is topped with a two-pitched slate roof, surmounted by three brick chimney stacks. The south and west walls are plastered. A garage was added later to the street-facing facade.This description has been automatically translated from French.
…$2,184,000230m²5bedroomsland 663m²By Patrice Besse
- Exclusivity16
House with garden Tours (37)
In the center of Tours, between courtyard and garden, a 19th-century townhouse and its converted annexes. The building dates from 1850. Located on a one-way street, it is built over three levels, including a converted attic, on a cellar. To the west, on the street side, the facade made of light brick and tuffeau decorations features six rectangular openings. At the first level, they frame a double arched wooden carriage door and an opening with a triangular pediment supported by sculpted consoles. At the second level, protruding from the carriage door, a corbelled balcony with a wrought iron railing adds rhythm to the facade. It is complemented by a cornice with dentils and corbels, beneath a slate roof. At the third level, two dormer windows with curved arches punctuate the roof. On the garden side, the annexes are covered with wooden cladding, and the roofs are made of zinc and slate. The interior spaces are bright, with light wooden floors and white walls. The house at the back opens onto a landscaped courtyard with converted annex buildings and a small garden. A boiler room and two cellars occupy the basement.This description has been automatically translated from French.
…$1,821,000410m²7bedrooms1bathroomland 383m²By Patrice Besse
- Exclusivity18
House with garden Bordeaux (33)
An 18th-century manor house with 2.7-hectare grounds, between Bordeaux and the River Dordogne. This residence is located on the roadside of the thoroughfare running alongside the River Dordogne and is made up of a rectangular edifice flanked by two outbuildings. The main section, as well as most of the outbuildings, are constructed in ashlar topped by roofs made of traditional half-round tiles. The façade is punctuated with segmental arched windows framed by sober mouldings and is a perfect illustration of the 18th-century country house architecture in the area around Bordeaux, an era in which the owner Mr. Soubran most likely undertook partial reconstruction, leading to the residence being given its current name. It has preserved its impressive appearance in spite of some of the outbuildings being in ruins. Today, the house made of local stone has a ground floor made up of three reception rooms, a kitchen, an office and a variety of storage space. On the upper floor, there are four bedrooms as well as a reading area. The edifice stands in a vast, 2.7-hectare garden with a small wood in the middle.
…$661,500250m²4bedrooms1bathroomland 2.5haBy Patrice Besse
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