An architectural revival in the heart of Chianti, featuring an underground wine cellar and tasting room, a full spa with hammam, and a panoramic infinity pool with vineyard views—just 30 minutes from Florence.
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An architectural revival in the heart of Chianti, featuring an underground wine cellar and tasting room, a full spa with hammam, and a panoramic infinity pool with vineyard views—just 30 minutes from Florence.
Built as a hunting lodge, this ivy-clad manor blends Art Nouveau, Alsatian regionalism, and Arts and Crafts design. It sits just outside Belfort, where Franche-Comté, Alsace, and the Vosges quietly converge.
Built in the 1730s and restored in the 1990s, this Sicilian villa features a Baroque façade and a dramatic double staircase that feels straight out of The Leopard on Netflix.
For €990K: Discover a rare piece of Burgundy’s architectural past: once the gatehouse to a 10th-century château, now a restored manor with sculpted stonework by France’s master artisans, a travertine-edged pool, and wine-worthy cellars, all tucked inside a fortified hilltop village.
The French chateau for sale is set in the heart of a 160 acre estate near the Swiss border in France, just 3 miles from Lake Geneva and 10 miles from the city of Geneva.
Imagine owning a 1/8 share and spending 45 nights a year in a €4,950,000 estate on the French Riviera, without the burdens of full ownership. Lazazu’s co-ownership model makes it possible—luxury homeownership, minus the hassle.
Tucked away in the Cotswolds AONB, just minutes from village life and historic pubs, Edgeworth Manor offers rare seclusion in one of England’s most coveted landscapes.
A restored 17th-century villa with resort-style pools, a Tuscan hamlet, and a winery producing 110,000 bottles of Chianti Classico per year—just under an hour from Florence, yet a world of its own.
Meticulously renovated, this 15th-century manor in the Loir Valley offers historic charm without château upkeep. Just two hours from Paris, it’s linked to poet Pierre de Ronsard, with legends of hidden tunnels to his childhood home.
Located in the quiet village of Tolochenaz, about 30 minutes from Geneva, La Paisible—French for “the peaceful place”—was Hepburn’s home from 1963 until her death in 1993.