A renovated 18th-century stone house with a walled garden, beside Andaines forest in Normandy - ref 145806
A renovated 18th-century stone house with a walled garden, beside Andaines forest in Normandy.
The property lies in a small town in Normandy between Andaines forest and the Normandie-Maine regional nature park. On foot, you can easily reach all the town's shops and amenities from the property. The Chateau de Carrouges, which dates back to the 14th century, is 15 minutes away by car, as is Briouze train station. From this station, you can get to Paris in two hours by rail. The spa town of Bagnoles-de-l'Orne and its golf course are nine minutes away and a 65-hectare outdoor activities centre lies 10 minutes from the house too. You can reach the town of Cabourg and the Côte Fleurie coastline in 1 hour and 20 minutes and the city of Caen in only an hour. The charming town of Argentan is 30 kilometres from the property.
From a calm street in the town centre, a wrought-iron gate framed between two stone pillars marks the property's entrance. The property is enclosed with stone walls. From there, a tree-lined driveway snakes up to the 18th-century dwelling, which is crowned with a gabled slate roof punctuated with dormers. The house is built of local rubble granite that is typical of the region. It has a ground floor, a first floor and a second floor in the roof space. The south-west-facing edifice is rectangular with an extra section at a right angle to the main body. An annexe and a wooden terrace adjoin the south end. Wooden canopies with slate roofs extend over the two entrance doors. On the north side, a brick extension with a window enlarges the lounge. Two vehicles can be parked in the garage, which serves as a wine cellar too. You can reach this garage from the street or from the garden. Its large terrace leads to the garden. There, an age-old cedar towers. A vast gravel court, which you can reach from the entrance hallway, extends behind the house. A shed stands at the bottom of the garden.
The houseThe facade and the court-side elevation are punctuated with large-paned rectangular windows. Granite ashlar forms the window surrounds, dormers and quoins. A guardrail edges a dormer above the kitchen. And a curved balcony with a wrought-iron balustrade extends above a wooden terrace.
The ground floor
The entrance door leads into hallway where a staircase with a wrought-iron balustrade takes you upstairs. The floor of the entrance hallway is adorned with cement tiles with a geometric pattern. The kitchen is modern and connects smoothly to the dining room and hallway, forming a space with a floor area of almost 60m². On one side, a glazed double door with small panes leads into a large lounge with a fireplace, a nook and floor slabs of Burgundy stone. This space covers almost 50m². Its walls are white and exposed oak beams run across its ceiling. The room is bathed in natural light. The windows are fitted with light-blocking shutters.
The first floor
Four bedrooms with wood strip flooring look out at the garden. One of them has a shower room. One of them has a walk-in wardrobe and leads out onto a curved south-facing balcony. There is also a bathroom and a lavatory on this floor.
The attic
You reach the second floor via the staircase. Up here, there is an office and a large bedroom. And a spare room with a 15m² floor area is ready to be converted. Dormers fill this floor with natural light. And the landing offers extra space on this top floor.
The garden and inner courtA majestic cedar that dates back to the house's time of construction towers on one side of the property's entrance space. Different shady spaces for outdoor relaxation offer absolute privacy. And a large gravel court at the back offers the perfect spot for hosting guests outside.