Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

New Logis de Candes-Saint-Martin en Indre-et-Loire

Patrimoine classé
Demeure seigneuriale
Logis
Château de plaisance
Indre-et-Loire

New Logis de Candes-Saint-Martin

    Rue de la Douve
    37500 Candes-Saint-Martin
Crédit photo : Joël Thibault - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

Temps modernes
Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1700
1800
1900
2000
1682
Construction of the first castle
1781
Partial sale and demolition
1820
Reconstruction of the present castle
1977
Historical Monument
2009
Acquisition by the Pignet family
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

The facades and roofs of the house, commons bordering the entrance courtyard and the enclosure tower; the room on the first floor of the house with wallpaper decoration; the terrace with its retaining walls (cad. B 146, 636, 637): entry by order of 21 November 1977

Key figures

Michel Amelot de Gournay - Sponsor of the first castle (1682) Initiator of the less austere episcopal residence.
Archevêque de Conzié - Last ecclesiastical owner (1781) Sell the castle to finance Grandmont-lès-Tours.
Alexandre-Jean-Baptiste Cailleau - Architect and Mayor of Saumur Buyer in 1781, destroyer/rebuilder in 1820.
Famille Pignet - Owners since 2009 Turns the castle into a tourist residence.

Origin and history

Le Nouveau Logis de Candes-Saint-Martin, also known as Château Neuf, replaces a 17th-century building built in 1682 by Michel Amelot de Gournay to serve as a summer residence for the Archbishops of Tours. This first castle, less austere than the Old Neighbor's Castle, was sold in 1781 by the Archbishop of Conzié to finance works at the priory of Grandmont-lès-Tours. A watercolour of 1699 offered the only known visual testimony, although its fidelity remained uncertain.

Destroyed in 1820 after its acquisition by the architect Alexandre-Jean-Baptiste Cailleau (mayor of Saumur), the castle was rebuilt at the beginning of the 19th century in a neo-classical style, slightly back from the hillside. The new building, in tufted and slate, adopts a U-shaped plan with a northern facade decorated with a circular forebody and an unusual baroque pediment for the area. The 17th century communes, the tower of Aubigny (vestige of medieval ramparts) and the Gallo-Roman cellars dug in the rock bear witness to the historical strata of the site.

Ranked a Historic Monument in 1977 for its facades, roofs and interior decorations (woodworks and mythological wallpapers of the nineteenth century), the estate has been owned by the Pignet family since 2009. After three years of renovation, it now hosts a high-end tourist residence (Candes Art & Spa), with 32 rooms and private spaces for events. The site also preserves traces of its wine past, like a press connected to the cellars by a drain carved in the rock.

The present castle incorporates disparate elements: the 17th-century communes bordering the entrance courtyard, the restored Gothic Revival tower in the 19th century, and the 18th-century lambris from the Trocheille castle in Couziers. Its strategic location, overlooking the confluence of Loire-Vienne, made it a place of religious power and then a symbol of local heritage, between Gallo-Roman memory and architectural reinventions.

External links