A 19th-century bourgeois house and its outbuildings, along the Seine's meanders, one hour from Honfleur and 150 kilometres from Paris. Where the Austreberthe and Seine Rivers converge, at the gates of the Meanders of the Seine Regional Natural Park and the Norman Abbey route, the village benefits from an ideal geographical location. From the B-road that criss-crosses the river's right bank, a gentle sloping road traverses the centre of the village and leads to the property, which faces a church square. The church in question, with its 12th-century bell tower, is listed as a Historical Monument. The four-storey dwelling, once a village school, is made out of brick and topped with a slate roof and includes two entrances, accessible from the square on the southwest side of the dwelling. The main building, with its impressive volumes, simply and symmetrically laid out in terms of its floors and vertical rows of windows, is flanked on either side by two single-storey pavilions. A courtyard, to the northeast of the building and accessible from the side via a wooden door, provides access to a garage and several outbuildings at the back of the lot. Lastly, a wall encloses the property on its street side.
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