Located in Lubriano, Lazio—just minutes from the Umbrian border—this 18th-century estate blends the slow living of the Italian countryside with easy access to Orvieto, Civita di Bagnoregio, and the wine-rich hills of Umbria.
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Located in Lubriano, Lazio—just minutes from the Umbrian border—this 18th-century estate blends the slow living of the Italian countryside with easy access to Orvieto, Civita di Bagnoregio, and the wine-rich hills of Umbria.
This 19th-century former hunting lodge offers 10,000+ sq ft of living space, a private gym, cinema, tennis court, and guest quarters—all tucked into five wooded acres just outside Aix-en-Provence.
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.
A discreet Provençal retreat with timeless details, sweeping views, and a setting few ever get to call home, just ten minutes from the centre of Aix.
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.
A charming Maison de Maître (traditional French manor house) set on over four acres of private parkland in La Longine, a quiet corner of Haute-Saône often called one of France’s most poetic and undiscovered regions.
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.
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.