
Château de Rivaulde
The brainchild of Henri Schneider's hunting ambitions, Château de Rivaulde elegantly embodies the art of living in Sologne during the Belle Époque, combining neoclassical architecture and industrial engineering in the heart of the Salbris forests.

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History
Hidden away in the forest of Sologne-Berrichonne, Château de Rivaulde is one of the sumptuous hunting residences that flourished in the region at the dawn of the 20th century, when the French industrial aristocracy rediscovered the virtues of the great outdoors and game. Designed by the architect Paul-Ernest Sanson, one of the masters of bourgeois and aristocratic taste of his time, it stands out as a remarkable synthesis of modern domestic comfort and the architectural prestige inherited from the great neo-classical residences. What distinguishes Rivaulde from a simple hunting manor is the sophistication of its spatial planning. The monumental entrance hall, the real beating heart of the château, orchestrates the distribution of spaces with almost musical precision: on one side, the splendours of social life - guest lounge, hunting room - and on the other, the intimacy of the private flats. Behind this vestibule are three communal rooms of rare quality: library, drawing room and dining room, all antechambers to the literate conviviality of hunting evenings. The estate boasts a rare feature that makes it truly unique in Sologne: in addition to the château itself, it houses a hydroelectric power station, a testament to the industrial modernity of the Schneider family, a dynasty of industrialists linked to the forges of Le Creusot. This coexistence of seigniorial heritage and technical infrastructure makes Rivaulde a site at the crossroads of two eras and two cultures. A visit to this listed château is an invitation to take a stroll back in time, through the vast pine and birch forests so characteristic of the Sologne region. The stables, built in the same architectural vein, extend the experience and reveal the scale of an estate conceived as a complete world, self-sufficient and sovereign, in the image of those his contemporaries built in the valleys of the Loire and Cher rivers.
Architecture
Château de Rivaulde was part of the neo-classical eclecticism of the late 19th century, characteristic of the large bourgeois holiday homes designed during the Third Republic. Paul-Ernest Sanson used an elegant, measured architectural vocabulary, far removed from the neo-Gothic or neo-Renaissance extravagance that was in vogue among some of his contemporaries at the time, preferring sober volumes, strong horizontal lines and a facade design that recalls the tradition of classical French châteaux while incorporating modern amenities. The L-shaped plan, characteristic of the project chosen in 1898, organises the spaces around a central hall with a monumental staircase that forms the backbone of the château. This staircase, conceived as much as an element of representation as of circulation, served the hunters' room and guest flats on the right, and the owners' private flats on the left - a functional separation revealing the social life of Sologne hunting estates. Three reception rooms are arranged behind the vestibule: library, drawing room and dining room, forming a series of ceremonial rooms. The stables, built according to the same architectural plan, form a complementary ensemble of great stylistic coherence. The presence of the hydroelectric power station on the estate adds an unusual industrial dimension to this heritage ensemble, making Rivaulde a unique testimony to the technical modernity that the great industrial families of the Belle Époque introduced into their leisure homes. The entire estate blends harmoniously into the Sologne landscape of forests and ponds that forms its natural setting.
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