Vevrier - Villa
Tucked away between the glamorous glitz of Cannes and the rugged cliffs of the Esterel Mountains lies a plot of land that has baffled locals for decades. To the untrained eye, it is merely an overgrown estate behind rusted iron gates. But to connoisseurs of the French Riviera’s secret history, it is known as Villa Vevrier —a name that translates peculiarly to "The Asparagus Patch."
Inspired by the newly built Palais du Trocadéro in Paris, he commissioned a structure of . The villa was a masterpiece of early modernist engineering: a three-story rotunda with no interior load-bearing walls, wrapped entirely in honey-colored glass panels. When the morning sun hit the facade, the entire hilltop glowed like a lantern. The Royal Snub The villa’s rise to infamy came in 1912. King Leopold II of Belgium, known for his brutal colonial rule and his fondness for the Côte d’Azur, requested a private dinner at Vevrier. Henri-Auguste, a staunch republican, refused the King entry, allegedly shouting from the balcony, "My glass house welcomes the sun, not the shadow of tyrants." villa vevrier
For decades, the villa stood in ruins. But in 2018, a Dutch conservation group purchased the property under a single condition: they would not restore the glass to its original amber tint. Instead, they used —glass that turns opaque on command. Tucked away between the glamorous glitz of Cannes