A restored 18th-century wine estate near Siena brings together award-winning organic wine production, a historic villa, and modern estate infrastructure at the gateway to the Val d’Orcia.
A restored 18th-century wine estate near Siena brings together award-winning organic wine production, a historic villa, and modern estate infrastructure at the gateway to the Val d’Orcia.
An exceptional example of early 18th-century French classicism, this estate carries the architectural ambition of the period that produced it. Its history spans the speculative boom of 1720 and the enduring Revolutionary-era anecdote that links it, however loosely, to Marie Antoinette.
A restored winegrower’s house in the historic village of Cuiseaux brings together Burgundy’s architectural heritage and rare village privacy within a walled “clos,” offering the seclusion of a small estate just steps from local amenities.
Just five minutes from the Baroque town of Noto — the crown jewel of Sicily’s UNESCO-listed Val di Noto — this restored Sicilian baglio reimagines a historic fortified farm estate as a contemporary retreat.
A few steps from Le Bon Marché—at the center of Paris’s most discreet and competitive residential micro-market—this 18th-century mansion sits hidden behind a private courtyard and bordered by two exclusive-use gardens.
Designed by Robert Adam, the leading neoclassical architect of the Georgian era, this 764-acre, Category A–listed estate near Edinburgh blends significant architecture with a historically attributed Versailles-inspired landscape and income-generating properties.
A rare restoration opportunity: a fully classified estate with the highest heritage status France grants — reserved for nationally important sites — just two hours from Paris.
Carved into the Luberon limestone above Ménerbes, two connected homes form a vaulted stone labyrinth with exceptional architectural character. Set in one of Provence’s most sought-after hillside zones, the estate stands out as a rare example of rock-carved residential design.
Set within the village of Nerola in the Sabina hills, under an hour from Rome, the 11th-century fortress underwent extensive restoration in the 20th century, preserving its medieval exterior while preparing it for hotel and event use.
Set on the banks of the Aube River in Laferté-sur-Aube, this French manor house is set in nearly 20 acres of grounds in a region where Champagne’s rolling vineyards meet the forested plateaus of Burgundy’s northern edge.