Villa Rothschild

[1] It was turned into a media library and carries the commercial name "médiathèque Noailles".

[2] The land (where the Villa Marie-Thèrese was standing[3]) was acquired by Betty de Rothschild in 1881, and marked the first time a Rothschild planned the construction of an estate in Southwestern France.

The local architect Charles Baron was commissioned to build the villa in 1882.

It then belonged to her oldest son Alphonse James de Rothschild (1827–1905), and then to his son Édouard Alphonse James de Rothschild (1868-1949).

The back entrance's wood-sculpted wall boards are from the Hôtel Talleyrand in Paris.