Accommodation:
House - 195m². Loft, former reception room and 2-storey barn (all for
restoration) - 260m². Garaging and workshops - 140m².
House
Ground Floor
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Impressive double
doors with a high, arched fanlight, open into an attractive hall with
exposed beams, a colombage (wood timbered) wall, glazed door to the summer
terrace, a door to the cellar, a door to a rather antique wc, a flight of
wooden stairs to the first floor landing and a flight of 5 stone steps to
the main living area.
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Main living area,
7.5m x 11m (max) divided visually into a living room and a kitchen.
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Living room, 7.5m
x 5.7m, with a splendid stone fireplace, magnificent beams, some exposed
stonework, a full-height window overlooking the garden a smaller window
overlooking the distant views and a particularly attractive floor of
terra-cotta tiles inlaid with wooden bands.
¨
Semi-divided from
the living room by a terra-cotta-tiled counter is the kitchen, 5.3m x 4m,
with exposed beams, terra-cotta tiles, some exposed stonework, 2 windows and
a double sink. It is furnished, rather than fitted and the effect is
charming.
¨
From the living
room a door leads to a short flight of steps which give access to a
potentially splendid salon, 8m x 7.5m, with huge window openings looking
south and the same window openings (currently blocked) in the north façade.
¨
From the hall a
door opens onto the cellar steps which lead down to a series of 3 cellars
with an overall area of approximately 40m² . The first two spaces have
concrete floors and house the laundry equipment and the nearly new gas-fired
central heating boiler. The third area has an earth floor and forms the wine
cellar. There is an external door to the rear
garden.
¨
A small lavatory
opens from the hall and is of the old-fashioned "hole in the ground" variety
- a bit of a collector's item!
First Floor
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The elm staircase
leads up to a landing, 4.5m x 2.2m, with a wooden floor and an arched
window. All the floors on the first floor are constructed with a double
layer of floor boarding to improve the sound insulation.
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Bedroom (1), 4m x
4m, with a full height window (lovely views), exposed beam, and some
visible stonework.
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Bedroom (2), 4m x
4m, with beams, exposed stonework and a window overlooking the front garden.
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Bedroom (3), 4m x
3m, with a full-height window, exposed stonework, beams and a wonderful
view.
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Bathroom with
terra-cotta floor tiles, window, bath, wc and a basin in a built-in unit.
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Bedroom (4), 6.5m
x 3m, a child's study/bedroom, with window overlooking the front garden,
beams and exposed stonework.
Second Floor
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A staircase goes
up to the loft, 12m x 10m, with impressive timberwork.
¨
The loft has
sufficient headroom to create more living space and the current owners have
already converted part of the space into a small bedroom.
Outbuildings/garaging.
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A
nicely-proportioned barn, at right-angles to the main house (the corners
touch) has a ground floor, 8.5m x 5m with a large east-facing doorway,
concrete floor and a wooden open-plan staircase to the first floor. The
bottom half of the rear wall is very thick and this was originally the
walkway that led around the village ramparts. The first floor has a high
'cathedral" roof, providing plenty of scope for conversion.
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Below the
potential salon are the former stables, 8m x 7.5m, currently used as
garaging and workshop, with a wide garage door to the parking area at the
front of the house and another wide opening to a further garage.
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Further garaging,
7m x 12m, in a mixture of corrugated iron and stone. This is a less
attractive building and leads to a further:
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Single, open garage.
Ramparts
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These date back to
the C12th and comprise a tall, stone double-storey building - possibly a
former watchtower - and a further series of crumbling walls.
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The stone is
magnificent and adds a feeling of grandeur to the landscaping of the garden.
They could be exploited to gretaer effect, perhaps to form a backdrop to a
swimming pool.