STUDIO MUGO assists CHÂTEAU BEAUREGARD in the restoration of the historic park surrounding the 18th-century chartreuse.

Malvina Bali (Paris Malaquais School of Architecture – Buenos Aires University) and Caroline Braley (Telecom-INSEAD-Master’s degree in Historic Gardens from ENSAV) are going to collaborate with the teams of CHÂTEAU BEAUREGARD to revive the park of one of Pomerol great.

The story of Beauregard dates back to the 12th century and the Order of the Knights of the Hospital of Saint John of Jerusalem, from which Beauregard’s emblematic Knights Templar cross originates.  It was on this site, five centuries later, that the Beauregard family built the first house, which was replaced during the Napoleonic era by the present château -a magnificent Gironde chartreuse, opening out onto a terrace with two dovecotes overlooking a moat and a magnificent park created by a pupil of Victor Louis, the architect of Bordeaux’s Grand Théâtre.

This residence inspired America’s Guggenheim family, who built a copy at Port Washington on the Long Island peninsular, and called it Mille-Fleurs”. It was in the middle of the 18th century that Beauregard changed from a mixed farming estate to a vine-growing property. Decade after decade, successive owners contributed to its development and towards its rank as one of the best wines in Pomerol.

OTHER NEWS

STUDIO MUGO assists CHÂTEAU BEAUREGARD in the restoration of the historic park surrounding the 18th-century chartreuse.

chateau-beauregard-anaka

Malvina Bali (Paris Malaquais School of Architecture – Buenos Aires University) and Caroline Braley (Telecom-INSEAD-Master’s degree in Historic Gardens from ENSAV) are going to collaborate with the teams of CHÂTEAU BEAUREGARD to revive the park of one of Pomerol great.

The story of Beauregard dates back to the 12th century and the Order of the Knights of the Hospital of Saint John of Jerusalem, from which Beauregard’s emblematic Knights Templar cross originates.  It was on this site, five centuries later, that the Beauregard family built the first house, which was replaced during the Napoleonic era by the present château -a magnificent Gironde chartreuse, opening out onto a terrace with two dovecotes overlooking a moat and a magnificent park created by a pupil of Victor Louis, the architect of Bordeaux’s Grand Théâtre.

This residence inspired America’s Guggenheim family, who built a copy at Port Washington on the Long Island peninsular, and called it Mille-Fleurs”. It was in the middle of the 18th century that Beauregard changed from a mixed farming estate to a vine-growing property. Decade after decade, successive owners contributed to its development and towards its rank as one of the best wines in Pomerol.

OTHER NEWS