Location
In northern Ille-et-Vilaine, in the historic province of Brittany, on the banks of the River Rance, the village — a former fishing settlement — ranks among the most beautiful in France. Its centre is threaded with narrow lanes lined with granite houses, in direct contact with the estuary and its maritime setting. The property stands at the heart of the village, within immediate reach of shops, the school and the quays. Saint-Malo and its TGV station are some twenty minutes by car; Dinan, 25 minutes; Rennes, under an hour. From Saint-Malo, Paris is less than 3 hours by train.
Description
The main dwelling
The ground floor
The stone-flagged entrance hall leads to a living room retaining its original fittings. To one side of the doorway, a former china dresser with stone shelves is set into the thickness of the wall. The gable wall holds a fireplace with granite corbels and lintel. Against the rear wall, a run of built-in furniture within the wooden panelling includes two box beds and a longcase clock. This interior illustrates attests to the room's historic role as the principal living space. A kitchen, which connects with this room, has a cabochon-tiled floor. Beyond, a study occupies the rear of the house. At the far end, within partly rendered stone walls, a sitting room retains a stone fireplace with a straight hood above the mantel.
The upstairs
Several hallways serve the various rooms, whose floors are predominantly original timber boards. The walls, rendered or papered, retain decorative elements in places, while the ceilings combine exposed beams, exposed joists and smooth sections at varying heights. Four bedrooms occupy this level; one extends to a dressing room, another incorporates storage. A stone fireplace stands against one wall, where windows are fitted with small-pane glazing. A bathroom adjoins a separate lavatory.
The attic
At the second level, two distinct areas, as yet unconverted, with the roof trusses exposed throughout. The openings afford a plunging view over the tightly packed rooftops of the village.
The outbuildings
Several outbuildings are distributed across the property: two cellars, a workshop, two lean-tos and a car shelter. In need of restoration, they represent genuine potential for additional accommodation and lend themselves to a variety of uses. Some could be converted into self-contained dwellings.
The garden
Enclosed by walls, borders and mature trees punctuate the garden, among them a silkworm mulberry. A circular press and a stone well speak to the site's rural past.
Our opinion
In this lively Breton village, the maison de maître has held on to something that time has erased in most dwellings of its kind: a legible interior, unaltered in its essentials, where the central room, the built-in furniture, the box beds and the granite fireplaces read as a coherent whole. The courtyard and walled garden carry that same quality of restraint; the attic, the proportions and the light point to possibilities that need not be forced. What gives the property its singular identity, though, reveals itself only gradually — a circular press, an ancient mulberry tree, and behind them an entire rural history that is not apparent at first glance.
820 000 €
Fees at the Vendor’s expense
Reference 615172
| Land registry surface area | 1588 m² |
| Main building floor area | 205 m² |
| Number of bedrooms | 4 |
French Energy Performance Diagnosis
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.