A stone farmhouse in Tellières-le-Plessis, France, sat forgotten for over 15 years—lengthy sufficient for the forest to start out taking it again. Then a Parisian couple took it on, enlisting Paris agency Les Ateliers Permanents to revive the home whereas sustaining historic particulars. “From the very first visits, we shared the need to protect the spirit of the place—to intervene with out erasing,” says Chloé Morin, principal architect together with Enzo Fruytier and, just lately joined by François Gastesoleil of Gastesoleil.
The renovation was modest in scale (1,300 sq. toes) however exacting in execution. New openings have been reduce; exterior joinery changed; wattle-and-daub partitions stripped again; lime renders redone; with 12 inches of wood-wool insulation within the roof and 6 inches on choose north and west partitions. Be a part of us for a more in-depth look.
Picture Philippe Billard for Les Atelier Permanents.






