CHECKING-IN TO | CABANA TRAVEL | WORLD OF CABANA
Every great adventure should begin with an inspirational base from which to explore your new surroundings. In this series, we share hotels and guest houses, of all shapes and sizes, that truly embody the spirit of Cabana. This month, we're in the Loire Valley checking-in to Hotel Château du Grand-Lucé.
BY HAMISH ROY | CABANA TRAVEL | SEPTEMBER 2023
Le Grand-Lucé is a handsome village in the Loire Valley, about half an hour from Le Mans. It has a stately name, meaning ‘great light’, which fits perfectly thanks to Baron Jacques Pineau de Viennay, a royal councillor in the court of King Louis XV. In want of a summer residence, the baron commissioned a château there in 1760.
The Baron was a man of voguish tastes, appointing architect Mathieu Bayeux to create a neoclassical design and fêted rococo painter Jean-Baptiste Pillement to work on the interiors. When, just four years later, Château du Grand-Lucé passed to his daughter, Louise, the ‘great light’ came flooding in. The grand house was a hive of enlightenment thinkers, with Diderot, Voltaire and Rousseau among her esteemed guests.
Did they take philosophical pot-shots at their companions while walking in the rose garden? Write scandalous letters to their paramours in the study? Who knows, but the history here certainly makes your imagination run riot.
Given its size, the house has a quirk: its monumental front gate opens right onto the village square. From this vantage point, the estate is hidden behind the façade of cream tuffeau stone, so you can’t see the French gardens, orchard, meadows, woodland or lake. Nor can you see the Greek and Roman statues, housewarming gifts from King Louis XV. Passing through those gates is like stepping into a Watteau painting.
This is only possible thanks to Tom and Marcy Holthus, who opened Hôtel Château du Grande-Lucé in 2019. They bought the house from interior designer, Timothy Corrigan, who used it as a private home. It was Corrigan who did the heavy lifting, carrying out a years-long restoration and refurbishment to return the building to its neoclassical roots. He also filled it with exquisite antiques, many of which were included in the sale. The Holthus’s own designers added to the riches but stayed true to Corrigan’s goal – making a 40,000-square-foot house feel like a home.
One of Corrigan's calling cards is the wallpaper, hand-painted by de Gournay or drawn from the archives of Pierre Frey. In one room, a flotilla of hot air balloons pays tribute to aviation pioneers and balloonists, the Montgolfier brothers, while in another, illustrated figures rove between tiny, idyllic islands on a powder-blue sea.
The furniture is no less sublime: Bergère armchairs; rococo chests; and Louis XV cabinets inlaid with gold leaf or stencilled with elaborate trompe l'oeil designs. Hanging overhead are chandeliers shaped like golden vines, a dew drop of crystal shimmering on every stem. This finery is worthy of a museum, but the hotel’s greatest triumph is that it feels nothing like one.
You can put your feet up by the rouge-royal fireplace in the grand salon, drink Coteaux du Loir amid the Hermès cushions, or have a knock-about on the finest billiards table you’ve ever seen, decorated with gold leaf and tassels. Miraculously, there isn’t a ne pas toucher ('do not touch') sign in sight.
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With special thanks to Mr & Mrs Smith | Hotel Château du Grand-Lucé