Built in the late 18th and early 19th centuries on a former vineyard by the mayor of the commune whose name it bears, Château Urdy is a handsome manor house with magnificent grounds. It is now used as a village hall.
Description
On the 1835 land register, the buildings, registered in the name of Chambon, were part of a winegrowing estate. Only the stables and part of the agricultural outbuildings occupy the same site. The current main building, adjoining these former agricultural parts, was completely rebuilt at the end of the 19th century or the very beginning of the 20th, for Doctor Jean-Pierre-Léopold Urdy. In the second half of the twentieth century, the estate lay abandoned for a while, before being bought back by the municipality in 1986. Since then, the former stables have been converted into a workshop, and the restored farm outbuildings have been converted into a multi-purpose hall.
The Urdy estate (park & buildings) is privately owned by the municipality, and access to it is forbidden to the public except for those who have rented the village hall.
Spoken languages
- French
Themes
- Historic patrimony
- House
Opening
Closed Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday.