There are places that you don’t find by chance. This one, for example.A road that wanders off, cypress trees bending in the wind like in an old painting, the Gers at its most gentle. Not a sound, barely a bell tower ringing, and the Pyrénées in the distance, like a promise. You are close to Lectoure, but not too close. Just enough to go have a coffee and read the local news in the morning, bump into two friendly faces, grab something for lunch and then rush back. To find calm. To close the gate.It looks a lot like it, but it’s not the Luberon, and that’s a good thing. No crowded terraces, no lukewarm rosé under pretentious pergolas, no snobs in dark glasses to hide the fact that they're complete strangers. Here, luxury is elsewhere. In the silence. In the space. In this way of not being noticed.The house looks like it never wanted to be anything other than what it is: a collection of stone buildings, placed there with a certain obviousness. Like a private hamlet, but without folklore. The roofs are straight, the materials have aged, the walls are thick. You breathe a certain idea of discretion here.Nothing is garish. Everything is there, though. The volumes. The light. The materials chosen for their truth rather than for their effect. Wood, stone, lime. Sometimes a more contemporary detail, but slipped in just to highlight. There is taste, truth, not that ostentatious good taste that tires. It’s a house that knows restraint. And that is rare.There is the main house, first — vast, sober, comfortable without pretension. It makes you want to stay, to cook, to read, to not answer the phone. Five large bedrooms, each with its own bathroom, to spend your nights as if in a luxury hotel. A kitchen to prepare endless meals. Two lounges: one to bury yourself in a book, the other to talk too late, forgetting the time. And a billiard room to extend all that, a glass of armagnac in hand while listening to jazz (or something else, depending on your taste!). The pool? The word is weak; it’s more of a relaxation area, a vacation spot. You will spend entire days there, far from everything. Barbecues, lunches in the shade washed down with cool rosé, your gaze lost up to the Pyrénées.And then, a little off to the side, there is the gîte. A real one. Not a makeshift annexe to profit from the weekends. No. A separate place, independent, cared for with the same level of demand. Something to welcome without imposing, to share without disturbing. A house within a house, in short. For friends, family, or no one. A spacious room, as we love them, where the lounge, kitchen, and dining area share the space without ever hindering each other. One bedroom on the ground floor, three upstairs, three bathrooms so that everyone has their own realm, and even a laundry room — the kind of detail that makes life simpler. And then, of course, the pool. Just for the guests. A world of its own, closed off from the rest of the world, where you forget everything except the happiness of being there.It’s a house to live in all year round, or to rediscover each season like one reopens a beloved book. A house apart, in every sense. It doesn’t seek to please everyone — and that’s what makes it precious. It waits for those who know. You can come with books, records, silences. Or you can do nothing at all. That would already be a lot.Everything is ready. Key in hand, as they say. But the key here is especially one of intimacy. A door that you close gently behind you. And the world can continue without you.The information relating to the property, including but not limited to: surfaces, condition, features, and technical equipment (including, but not limited to: heating installations, electricity, plumbing, sanitation, pool, security systems, and any other equipment), is provided purely for informational purposes based on elements and declarations supplied by the seller. Bliss Immobilier, acting as an intermediary, cannot guarantee the accuracy, completeness, or current status of this information, nor be held responsible for the operation, condition, compliance, or longevity of the equipment, or the general state of the building, its structure, or its components. It is the responsibility of the buyer to carry out all checks, inspections, and assessments they deem necessary before any acquisition, particularly with qualified professionals. The provided information cannot engage the liability of Bliss Immobilier and does not constitute a contractual commitment in any way.
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