Missing these views and the serenity of that summer. Who else is dreaming of a getaway?
As Martin read, the house shifted. Rooms seemed to take on histories he hadn’t owned. The kitchen’s hearth hummed an old tune; the study held the salt-still breath of arguments settled days ago. At the window over the vineyard a faint terrace of footprints appeared sometimes at dawn—two small, bare marks like a child’s—then vanished when he opened the shutters. Once, in late autumn, he found a small knitted cap on the terrace—a pale blue, frayed at one seam. No child had visited; the village had no missing children in recent memory. When he asked, neighbors only tilted their heads and said, “The Vevriers keep what they keep.” villa vevrier 2021
The Vevrier name persisted, but like the house it had changed shape: something less like an accusation and more like weather—inescapable, seasonable, and finally, tended. Martin kept answering the old chest’s letters in his head, sometimes aloud, and sometimes he found new notes tucked between the timbers—one in a handwriting he’d never seen, thanking whoever had come after the old storms. Missing these views and the serenity of that summer
The villa was designed by the renowned Swiss architect , a figure celebrated for his contributions to the Art Nouveau and neoclassical movements. Rooms seemed to take on histories he hadn’t owned
Handled by specialized structural partners B+S Ingénieurs Conseils Monitored and budgeted by Haller Wasser High-Performance Energy (THPE Certification)
: Raising the structure to liberate ground-level spaces.