The 15th-century walls of the Trévilit manor house overlook the surrounding plain.
The main building, comprising only a ground floor and a first floor, includes a central section with eight latticed windows set around a moulded basket-handle door topped by a lancet and flanked by pilasters with fleurons.
This is followed by a wing linking the chapel to the main manor house. This wing has a ground floor and an attic lit by flat pediment roof dormers.
At the end of this building is the chapel, which forms a corner pavilion, but is bounded on the east and west by a gable.
Closing off the courtyard to the north is the defensive wall lined with corbels, which once supported the wall of the sentry walk lined with machicolations.
Visit of the exterior only.
The main building, comprising only a ground floor and a first floor, includes a central section with eight latticed windows set around a moulded basket-handle door topped by a lancet and flanked by pilasters with fleurons.
This is followed by a wing linking the chapel to the main manor house. This wing has a ground floor and an attic lit by flat pediment roof dormers.
At the end of this building is the chapel, which forms a corner pavilion, but is bounded on the east and west by a gable.
Closing off the courtyard to the north is the defensive wall lined with corbels, which once supported the wall of the sentry walk lined with machicolations.
Visit of the exterior only.


