The estate was built for large families. Grandparents in the château, parents in L'Orangerie, a young couple in Le Pigeonnier — everyone has space, everyone has privacy, everyone meets at dinner. The grounds provide enough room for toddlers to roam and teenagers to disappear (safely). This is what family holidays were meant to be.
With 34 hectares of walled parkland, the estate naturally separates the generations during the day — grandparents reading in the garden, parents at the pool, children on the farm or forest trails — and brings everyone together for long evening meals in the grand dining room or around the garden table. The kitchen garden provides fresh herbs and vegetables, the wine cellar opens for special evenings, and the medieval cellars host candlelit dinners. Three generations, one estate, and stories that span decades.
