In 1696, Etienne de Flaugergues, member of the local financial Court, bought a piece of land and built the mansion which henceforth carried his name.
In 1811, the Boussairolles family inherited the estate, and the baron Charles Joseph de Boussairoles designed the orangerie and the park in English garden style in 1850.
Much use is made of the difference in terrain level, creating separate spaces within the garden, and making the mansion look grander than it in fact is.
The façade is cut in half by a doorway with Doric pilasters, carrying an entablature with rose sculpted metopes.
The Eagle’s room features an exceptional mural decoration on the theme of the Campaign of Egypt created in 1990 by the artist Diane de Montbron.