Direct beach access, a seafront pool, and design pedigree tracing back to Porto Cervo’s founding architect. All in a walk-to-everything location in Costa Smeralda’s original jet-set village, one of the Mediterranean’s most coveted enclaves.
All in Europe
Direct beach access, a seafront pool, and design pedigree tracing back to Porto Cervo’s founding architect. All in a walk-to-everything location in Costa Smeralda’s original jet-set village, one of the Mediterranean’s most coveted enclaves.
Carved stone, antique fireplaces, and untouched upper floors define this 1771 château — originally a fortified manor — set in one of France’s last under-the-radar regions for historic estates.
A frescoed second-floor apartment in a noble Lucca palazzo makes a strong case for the Tuscan pied-à-terre—with three en-suite bedrooms, two balconies, and views of San Frediano.
While the world watched Bezos and Sánchez light up Venice, a real aristocratic gem quietly resurfaced a few bridges away. This 18th-century palazzo with historically important Rococo interiors is on the market with Lionard.
A historic Provençal manor has been quietly transformed near the Rhône—think soaring volumes, original stone, two pools, and over 11,000 ft² of space in a riverside village 30 minutes from Avignon.
Tucked inside the gated Cap Bénat estate — a low-profile hideaway on the Côte d’Azur — this cliffside villa has direct beach access and uninterrupted sea views.
Trophy apartments of this scale are increasingly elusive in Paris. In the Latin Quarter, a triplex Left Bank residence with luminous volumes and unobstructed Seine views—right where historic Paris comes alive.
This sleek villa designed by Milan architect Annalisa Mauri brings rare contemporary minimalism to the Como hills, where modern architecture is in short supply and international demand keeps rising.
Once a countryside escape for a university dean during the Enlightenment, this classical mansion now hides in plain sight in Montpellier’s historic center — a thriving university city near the Mediterranean in the South of France.
For £5.5 million, you can buy 1,110 acres of Scottish wilderness—and a castle to restore, built by an Antarctic explorer whose architect sank with the Titanic.