Best known for his work on the French Riviera, American architect Barry Dierks left behind one Italian masterpiece: a 1920s modernist villa with a private bay on the Ligurian coast.
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Best known for his work on the French Riviera, American architect Barry Dierks left behind one Italian masterpiece: a 1920s modernist villa with a private bay on the Ligurian coast.
Tucked beneath Cotignac’s cliffs, this Provençal home offers panoramic views, a garden by Christopher Masson, and front-row access to French village life—just a three-minute walk from the historic center.
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 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.
In Paris, every street tells a story. But only a few belong to the city’s unwritten canon of power, legacy, and mythic discretion. Rue des Saints-Pères, tucked between the Seine and the inner sanctum of Saint-Germain-des-Prés, is one of them.
One of the largest properties in Menaggio, with 1,050 feet of private lake frontage, Villa Olivetta is a Victorian outlier among the Italianate and Liberty-style estates that define Lake Como, built in the late 19th century by London-born engineer Herman Mylius.
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.
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.
Aberdeen boasts 400 feet of private Hudson River frontage, neighboring historic estates like the Vanderbilt Mansion, and once hosted Eleanor Roosevelt as a guest lecturer.