Set on a quiet residential street on Cap d’Antibes, the fabled four-mile peninsula which has attracted the glitterati since the 19th century.
All in Country Living
Set on a quiet residential street on Cap d’Antibes, the fabled four-mile peninsula which has attracted the glitterati since the 19th century.
Fresh on the market, Tommy Hilfiger’s instagram-worthy Connecticut estate may just break the internet.
Set on 2 acres of private landscaped gardens overlooking the coast, the villa has a pool with filtered natural sea water and offers direct access to the sea.
A former hunting lodge, Manoir de Chaubuisson was built in 1893 and transformed in 1950 as a Relais & Châteaux property. Since 2000, the manor has been used exclusively to host business seminars and there is a possibility to obtain a license for a three or four-star hotel.
The Georgian manor home offers sweeping views across its 57 acre estate, overlooking the ancient town of Rye, as well as the sea—the beautiful beaches at Camber Sands are 7 miles away.
Built in 1933 by New York architectural firm Clinton & Russel, the historic U-shaped Louis XV Revival House is named ‘Ker Arvor’ —which means ‘seaside’ in French Breton.
The property was put on the market in 2014 and despite multiple price reductions (from €55M to €25M) and a promotional video narrated by Douglas himself released in 2019, there were no serious offers. As of May 2020, the property has been taken off the market.
La Garibaldina is the perfect blend of rustic luxury. This bespoke estate in Costa Smeralda, Italy was designed to blend into its surroundings, set on 18.5 acres of land in the rocky Sardinian hillside. It is surrounded by natural vegetation with 52 olive groves, and is in close proximity to beaches, marinas and the village of San Pantaleo.
Set on nearly 7.5 acres, the property features beautifully landscaped gardens with a natural waterfall, a river, and fruit and olive trees. Follow the cypress-lined path downhill from the bastide, and you will find a pool and pool house to enjoy l’ete en Provence.
In 1915, George Elkins took a trip to England where he visited his friend, the Duke of Sutherland at Sutton Place in Surrey. His time at the estate inspired him so much that he decided to build his own Tudor estate modelled after Sutton Place, with elements imported from England.