Stand at the back of this house on any given morning and the entire Dordogne Valley opens up below you — river mist dissolving slowly in the early light, walnut trees on the hillside catching the first warmth of the sun, and the kind of silence that reminds you what silence actually is. This is Mouleydier, a proper village with a boulangerie, a butcher, a pharmacy, and neighbors who say hello. Not a tourist postcard. Real rural France, just fifteen minutes east of Bergerac.
The house sits on about 7,000 square metres in total — roughly 4,000 of enclosed garden and another 3,000 of private woodland at the back. That combination of open, cultivated space and wild tree cover gives the property two completely different characters depending on where you wander. The south-facing pool terrace catches sun from mid-morning until the last light of the evening. In July and August, when the Dordogne bakes, that matters enormously.
At 210 square metres, the interior is genuinely generous. The ground floor lives large — reception rooms totalling close to 80 square metres, with original terracotta floor tiles that have survived decades and still carry that warm, earthy tone you can't replicate with new materials. Two rooms connected to the main living space but with their own separate entrance are among the most interesting features in the house. Use them as a fourth bedroom and a home office, or as an art studio, or — with appropriate permissions — as a professional practice space. The flexibility is real and rare. Upstairs there are three further bedrooms, one of which stretches to 25 square metres — that's a proper primary bedroom, not a box with a window. A shower room with WC completes the upper floor.
The double garage deserve ... click here to read more