sleeping beauty
April 2024
|Architectural Digest US
In-demand cook and decorator Isabelle Moltzer helps revive a 16th-century estate that had long belonged to her family and finds a home of her own in the process
When Isabelle Moltzer’s parents reluctantly sold the Domaine de Bailleul in Normandy in 2011, she believed she would never return. “It was nightmarish,” she recalls. “It took two months to move everything out.” What made it particularly traumatic was that the 50-hectare property had been in the family since the mid 16th century, when its château was built by one of her ancestors, Bertrand de Bailleul (he is said to have welcomed Mary, Queen of Scots, there). “My attachment to the estate is visceral,” says Moltzer.
For years afterward, she avoided going anywhere near and deliberately made detours when passing through the region. Now, a curious twist of fate not only finds her back working at Bailleul, but also ecstatically ensconced in her childhood home— an outbuilding called La Maison Normande, or the Norman House, which she uses mainly for vacations and weekend getaways. “Sometimes I have to pinch myself,” she admits. “It’s like a fairy tale.”
In the role not quite of Prince Charming, but rather a benevolent benefactor, is Ranga Brossais Doliger, who acquired the domaine in 2018. The previous owner, a Russian businessman, had more or less left it abandoned. The gardens were overgrown and the outbuildings in a state of dilapidation. “It was like the castle in Beauty and the Beast,” Brossais Doliger says, insisting that he didn’t buy it to live there. He already owned another château nearby. Instead, he simply wanted to restore it to its former glory and planned to rent the outbuildings. “When I first visited, I had an uncanny feeling, as if I’d lived there in the past,” he recalls.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der April 2024-Ausgabe von Architectural Digest US.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Architectural Digest US
Architectural Digest US
Rocky Mountain High
Designer Frances Merrill of Reath Design channels the spirit of the landscape in her soulful transformation of an Aspen ski house
3 mins
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
LINES in the SAND
DESIGNED BY FOSTER + PARTNERS, THE NEW ZAYED NATIONAL MUSEUM IN ABU DHABI MARRIES VERNACULAR TRADITIONS WITH CUTTING-EDGE RESPONSES TO EXTREMIE CLIMATE NEEDS
3 mins
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
POWER PLAY
Architect Frank Gehry conjures an astonishing, sculptural home in Silicon Valley with discreetly deferential interiors by The Wiseman Group
5 mins
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
SLOW BURN
WITH HELP FROM DESIGNER REMY RENZULLO, JESSICA SAILER TAKES THE PATIENT, EVOLUTIONARY APPROACH TO OUTFITTING A BROOKLYN TOWN HOUSE FOR HER FAMILY
4 mins
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
FOREVER YOUNG
YOUNG HUH’S ROMANTIC HUDSON VALLEY FARMHOUSE IS A DREAMY BLEND OF COTTAGE STYLE, KOREAN HERITAGE, AND STIRRING REINVENTION
4 mins
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
Lights Fantastic
Lighting sculptor Stephen White constructed more than 2,000 works over his six-decade career, at least one a staggering 18 feet tall, yet his meticulous scrapbooks contain scant evidence of public recognition. A few newspaper clippings from Hawaii and the West Coast sit next to a single national magazine cover, nearly half a century old the logo obscuring White's (uncredited) design
3 mins
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
PARADISE FOUND
AT NORTHERN CALIFORNIA'S ICONIC SEA RANCH, HARD BY THE PACIFIC, COMMUNE DESIGN HELPS A YOUNG CREATIVE COUPLE MANIFEST THEIR DREAM OF COASTAL BLISS
4 mins
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
FERTILE IMAGINATION
DESIGNING A ROOFTOP GARDEN FOR THE STUDIO MUSEUM IN HARLEM, SARA ZEWDE TAKES INSPIRATION FROM THE NEIGHBORHOOD AS A PLACE AND AS AN IDEA
3 mins
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
CUTTING A RUG
Even during Sweden's famously long and bitter-cold winter, the dining room at Beata Heuman’s 18th-century family farmhouse bursts with life thanks to the hand-painted mural of tulips, lilies, dahlias, and fruit trees—all a nod to flora on the property grounds, much of it planted by her mom. Now, the AD100 designer has teamed up with the British wall covering brand de Gournay to bring that tableau (ever so slightly tweaked) into production. Heuman says of the collaboration, which also includes Delft Folly, her riff on the classic Dutch blue-and-white tiles. degournay.com
1 min
January / February 2026
Architectural Digest US
Passing the Torch
At Milan's new Olympic Village, architects Skidmore, Owings & Merrill envision community well beyond the Games
1 mins
January / February 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

