Located in the heart of the Perche region, the property is also ideal for a hotel project.
Built gradually between the 15th and 20th centuries, it brings together five main buildings, housing a total of 22 rooms for a surface area of approximately 2,500 m².
The property is located near the beautiful UNESCO-listed cathedral city of Chartres, the Châteaux of Maintenon and Nogent le Rotrou, located in the south of Perche, 10 minutes from the A10 motorway, it extends over a vast estate of approximately 42 hectares including 23 ha of woods and 14 ha of meadows, the rest being the park. While the main works of the building are in good condition, the interior fittings require complete restoration.
Positioned on the edge of a small village, the château was built on the remains of an old fortress destroyed during the Hundred Years’ War. Two separate entrances allow entry: one, overlooking the village, passes through a large wrought iron gate leading to the old porch-lounge, now transformed into a vast living room; the other, on the park side, takes a crenellated porch dominated by an imposing tower nicknamed “water tower”. After crossing a canal via a bridge.
In the 19th and 20th centuries, these remains were integrated into a larger composition.
These buildings are arranged around a U-shaped courtyard bordered by the Louis XVI pavilion and outbuildings, offering a view of an exceptional park. The 42-hectare park is distinguished by a spectacular 200-meter terrace overlooking a green meadow and woods composed of various species of hardwoods, interspersed by a canal. There are also boxwood and yew topiary embroidery, a majestic tree-lined avenue and a one-hectare vegetable garden. The five main buildings emerge as historical witnesses of several eras:
- The Pavillon du Bourg, built between the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries near the village.
- The châtelet known as “the Keep”, combining elements from the 15th, 18th and 20th centuries, connected by a medieval gallery dating from the 15th century. A residential part, added in 1980, is attached to it.
- The Saint-François tower, dating from the 15th century.
- The Louis XVI pavilion, or “Renaissance House”, with its La Cloche tower dating from the 16th century and remodeled in the 17th and 18th centuries.
- The outbuildings, comprising buildings from the 16th, 19th and 20th centuries with remarkable framework dating from the 16th century. The château benefits from a favorable location.
Paris is only 120 kilometers away and a motorway slip road is 16 kilometers away towards the capital and 8 kilometers towards Le Mans. The neighboring village of Brou, located 8 kilometers away, has essential shops and services. From a technical point of view, the estate is partially supplied with city water and equipped with a mixed sanitation system combining a septic tank and connection to the public networks.
























