Sunday, December 14, 2025
Monte-Carlo Monopoly Hits the Jackpot
Thursday, December 11, 2025
The Château de Madrid: A Riviera Castle Built on Fantasy, Light, and Forgotten Glamour
Perched high on the Saint-Michel plateau above Beaulieu-sur-Mer, the Château de Madrid is one of those Riviera landmarks that feels half-real, half-myth. It looks like a medieval fortress, yet it was born in 1931. It seems ancient, yet its story is firmly tied to the modern age of luxury tourism. And though many people admire it from afar, few know the strange and shimmering history behind its stone façade.
To understand the Château de Madrid, you have to return to a moment when the French Riviera was reinventing itself—when imagination, extravagance, and sunlight were the region’s unofficial currencies.
A Region Dreaming in Grand Hotels
Several dazzling hotel projects were drawn up, some ambitious enough to rival the Carlton in Cannes or the Le Negresco in Nice. But one by one, these Riviera fantasies were abandoned, their blueprints left to gather dust.
Then, finally, one dream became reality.
1931: The Château de Madrid Rises
From its terraces, visitors could take in both the Beaulieu harbor and the deep, luminous curve of the Saint Jean Cap Ferrat peninsula—views so expansive they seemed painted onto the horizon.
The hotel was expanded several times, modified to follow shifting tastes, and updated to meet the expectations of wealthier and more cosmopolitan travelers. But even as it evolved, it never lost its whimsical soul.
Guests Drawn to Sunlight, Solitude, and Secrets
In the 1930s, a well-known English novelist stayed at the Château under a pseudonym. He claimed the view from his suite made the Mediterranean look “as if it were listening,” and he drafted an entire chapter of a future bestseller from the terrace overlooking Cap-Ferrat.
The Escaping Heiresses
In the 1950s, two scandal-struck American heiresses fled New York society and hid at the Château for nearly a month. Staff recalled hearing them dancing barefoot late into the night, gramophone echoing down the stone corridors—determined to forget the headlines waiting for them back home.
The Painters Who Chased the Light
Several painters, attracted by the region’s unparalleled winter luminosity, set up small temporary studios inside the hotel.
These stories—half-whispered, half-documented—give the Château de Madrid the air of a place that kept its guests’ secrets safe.
Architectural Curiosities and Hidden Corners
Secret Internal Stairways
The hotel contained several narrow service staircases, built so staff could move unseen. One hidden passage connected directly from the upper floors to a private garden terrace. Another is rumored—though never confirmed—to have once led toward a villa farther down the hill.
Vaulted Stone Cellars
Beneath the Château lie vaulted storage rooms shaped like medieval armories. During World War II, these cellars sheltered local families during air raids, quietly echoing the building’s “castle” identity.
From Grand Hotel to Private Residence
Yet the building endures—an elegant sentinel watching over two harbors, a reminder of a time when imagination ruled architecture and the Riviera treated fantasy as a design principle.
The Château de Madrid stands today as a tribute to what the region once dreamed of becoming—and to the people who came searching for light, reinvention, or simply a place to disappear for a while.
Princess Charlene Brings Christmas Spectacular to Monaco
Monaco will set the stage for a dazzling Christmas production at the Fontvieille Big Top on 22nd and 23rd December, with all proceeds going to charities supported by Princess Charlene, who serves as the event’s High Patron.
Monaco Under the Stars was conceived after a meeting between Princess Charlene and Hassan El Hajjami, the internationally acclaimed choreographer and former artistic director at Cirque du Soleil. The Princess launched the initiative with the goal of giving children a magical, dream-inspired experience for the holiday season.
Created by Compagnie HASPOP and directed by El Hajjami—known globally as Haspop—the show blends hip-hop dance, visual poetry and contemporary storytelling in a fantastical world brought to life by international performers. The narrative follows young Elliott, led by a mysterious music box, on an enchanting journey through time as Monaco glows with festive magic. The production delivers a timeless message of generosity and unity, making it a captivating experience for audiences of all ages.
All proceeds support Princess Charlene’s charitable causes
International dance star brings unique vision
Hassan El Hajjami, a leading figure in contemporary performance art, has left his mark on the world’s major stages. A standout performer in Cirque du Soleil’s Beatles LOVE show and a finalist on America’s Got Talent, he later became a choreographer for Star Academy and spent over 15 years as artistic director at Cirque du Soleil. In 2020, he founded Compagnie HASPOP | Cirque du Grand Lyon, now known for its innovative shows worldwide.
His signature style—merging urban dance with contemporary circus arts—gives Monaco Under the Stars a vibrant, modern identity that remains accessible to audiences of all ages.
Performance details
The 60-minute show is suitable for children aged three and up. Three performances will take place at the Fontvieille Big Top:
22 December at 4pm
23 December at 11am
23 December at 4pm
Monday, December 8, 2025
North American vs France Real Estate
And while overall transaction volumes dipped, U.S. demand certainly didn’t. It has grown by about 5% year-on-year since 2021 and, as we predicted, accelerated further following the election. The reasons are consistent: politics, currency, certainty, and lifestyle.
Even as the dollar softens, French real estate maintains its appeal as a stable asset—and lifestyle, not speculation, remains the driving force, especially among our clients.
.png.webp)
.png.webp)











