A private mansion, dating from the 17th to 19th centuries,
in a Saumurois city, popular with tourists
Saumur, MAINE-ET-LOIRE pays-de-loire 49400 FR

Location

The property is located in the middle of a lively Saumurois city, known for its vineyards, gastronomy and heritage, while all shops, local services, weekly green markets as well as cultural and athletic facilities are accessible on foot.
As for the banks of the Loire River and their picturesque villages, they are less than 20 minutes away by car, just like Saumur and its train station, which provides service to Paris in one hour and 40 minutes, while the city of Angers can be reached in 40 minutes.

Description

Off of a side street from the downtown area, a large oak gate, framed by two pilasters, opens on to a courtyard facing northwest, while a second, adjacent entrance provides easy access for pedestrians. As for the three-storey dwelling, built in the 17th century, it features partially plastered tuffeau stone exteriors, which provide glimpses of the limestone used in its quoins and window/door surrounds.
Jutting out into the courtyard, a quadrangular tower topped with a three-sided roof, which is, in turn, punctuated by dormer windows, houses a grand staircase, whereas, to the east, the dwelling is extended by an edifice, built out of falun stone in the 19th century and crowned with a slate roof cadenced by three dormers with triangular pediments, as well as another perpendicular wing to the west.
Lastly, the dwelling’s outbuildings are laid out around the courtyard and include a workshop, a two-storey garage and four storerooms, while the property also includes a series of cellars.

The Private Mansion


The ground floor
An initial entrance hall provides access, on either side, to the dwelling’s living areas, which are decorated with wood panelling, finely sculpted fireplaces and visible ceiling beams. On one side, a dual-aspect living room with oak mitred Herringbone hardwood floors, opens on to an adjacent dining room, followed by a kitchen, while, on the other side, a second sitting room, with hexagonal terracotta floor tiles, communicates with a library, the latter of which includes two distinct spaces, separated by a semi-circular archway. The more private of the two features a large tuffeau stone fireplace and gives on to the 19th-century wing where two bedrooms with a shower room are within immediate proximity to a separate entrance.
In addition, from the tower, another entrance hall, with stone tile floors, provides access to the second sitting room, the library as well as a grand tuffeau stone staircase, with a central open newel and a stone balustrade, which ascends to the dwelling’s upper levels.
The first floor
A landing provides access, on one side, to a recently renovated shower room and, on the other, to four adjacent bedrooms with terracotta tile floors, plaster-coated walls and visible ceiling beams, while two of these bedrooms, with dual-aspect windows, each come with stone fireplaces, and a walkway communicates with a laundry room, a bathroom and a wardrobe.
The attic
This level includes a bedroom with a bathroom as well as a storage room, and provides access to an attic with insulated floors as well as visible chestnut rafters.

The Outbuildings

The dwelling’s garden level features a furnace room, a workshop, a storage room and a lavatory, while on the northern side of the courtyard are three storerooms for the garden’s maintenance equipment, irrigation system and the gate’s machinery. Last, but not least, the indoor garage, set back from the rest of the buildings, is large enough to accommodate two vehicles.

The Garden

With the water for the garden’s automated irrigation system supplied by a well, the formal courtyard is planted with several rosebushes, two lime trees and a young ginkgo biloba, while, to the west and set back from the garage, a space was once used as a vegetable garden.

The Cellars

Accessible from a door set within the grand double staircase, this level is made up of three separate spaces: one of them, with a fireplace, suggests occasional or permanent inhabitation, while another, with a well, is used as a wine cellar, whose falun stone wine racks are still etched with its 19th-century vintages.

Our opinion

In the Val de Loire region, this private mansion, built out of tuffeau and falun stone, is not only characteristic of this area’s architecture, but also underwent a meticulous renovation over the past couple of decades, whereas its understated exteriors conceal sizeable and inviting proportions, illuminated by wide windows. Faithful to the spirit of private mansions from this time period, the dwelling combines a fluid and well-balanced layout with an elegant appearance, while many of its decorative elements have been preserved, some of which are truly remarkable. Located in a city, teeming with flowering vegetation, this property would be ideal for a family, only a stone’s throw away from both Angers and the capital.

835 000 €
Fees at the Vendor’s expense


See the fee rates

Reference 355631

Land registry surface area 1552 m²
Main building floor area 420 m²
Number of bedrooms 7
Outbuildings floor area 175 m²

French Energy Performance Diagnosis


Information on the risks to which this property is exposed is available on the website: www.georisques.gouv.fr

Consultant

Mathieu Iung +33 1 42 84 80 85

contact

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NB: The above information is not only the result of our visit to the property; it is also based on information provided by the current owner. It is by no means comprehensive or strictly accurate especially where surface areas and construction dates are concerned. We cannot, therefore, be held liable for any misrepresentation.

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