A restored 18th-century mill, outbuildings and 2.5 ha of grounds 30 minutes from Tours in the Centre-Val de Loire region - ref 560727
A restored 18th-century mill, outbuildings and 2.5 ha of grounds 30 minutes from Tours in the Centre-Val de Loire region.
The property is situated in a hamlet halfway between Tours and the Beauval Zoo in the Indre-et-Loire department part of the Centre-Val de Loire region. There is a lively little town just a 5-minute drive away. Renowned for its wine-growing estates, the Cher valley is close to Amboise and major UNESCO World Heritage sites. Services from Tours TGV high-speed train station connect to Paris in 1h15.
Flanked by majestic tuffeau pillars, a tall wrought-iron gate opens onto a vast gravel courtyard. First the two adjoining mill buildings come into view, with their stone masonry facades, completely renovated and rendered. The four-pitched roofs of one of the two buildings are of slate, the other of flat tiles; the roof of the dwelling has shed dormers with triangular pediments.
Built in the 18th century, the estate is depicted on the Cassini map. The two main sections of the dwelling have two storeys beneath the roofspace, the main elevations face south-east and all the openings have dressed tuffeau limestone surrounds.
The single-storey outbuildings, with their slate and flat tile roofs, are set around a courtyard that, together with the mill, forms a U-shape. From the courtyard, there are several entrances to the house.
The well-tended landscaped grounds all face the mill. A large paved terrace runs along the edge of the buildings, providing access to the garden and the lake it overlooks. A reach and its reservoir border the property to the west, before the water feeds a wheel and runs through the park.
The houseThe facades feature small-paned rectilinear windows and one large arched glass door. The front door is positioned off-centre to one side. The articulation is simple, with dressed tuffeau limestone window surrounds, corner quoins and a cornice under a tiled hip roof edged with slate.
The ground floor
The entrance door opens into a full-width hallway. This serves on one side an open-plan kitchen with wood-burning range cooker and central island, followed by the sitting room. On the other side, it leads to a utility room with access to the mill and opposite to a closet, a lavatory and a staircase to the first floor. The floors are laid with large tiles. All the walls are painted beige to match the tiles.
The first floor
The landing serves a study and a corridor leading to a lavatory, a shower room and two bedrooms, one with a closet. The flooring is of straight strip hardwood and tiled in the shower room and lavatory. All the walls are painted and the rooms are lit by small-paned windows.
The attic
In the roofspace, the landing leads on one side to a bedroom with shower room and lavatory. On the other side, it serves an independent flat comprising a sitting room, an open-plan kitchen and a bedroom with bathroom and lavatory. The white-painted beams are exposed, the floors are of straight strip hardwood and tiled in the bathrooms, and the walls and sloping ceilings are painted in various light tones. The millThe mill house borders the west gable of the main building and has rectilinear windows, a large arched opening and a double French window with balustrade on the first floor. There are small-paned windows on all the sides. The entrance door from the courtyard is in the centre of the main facade.
The ground floor
The arched entrance door opens into a vast room where, set against the back wall, the mill mechanism has been completely restored, along with the wheel. On the other side, a passageway leads to a room with a door opening out onto the courtyard. These spaces are used as reception rooms. The floors, laid in a Roman Opus pattern, are of travertine. The stone ...