


The bell tower of Notre-Dame church was built in 1832, as can be seen from the date stamp on the ashlar inside, above the oculus. The rest of the building was rebuilt in 1848 to plans by architect Auguste Reimbeau.
Notre-Dame church is located in the centre of the village. It has an elongated plan. The single nave is preceded by the bell tower, the ground floor of which serves as the entrance vestibule. The choir takes the form of a semicircular apse with a polygonal volume. The sacristy backs onto the north side, straddling the choir and apse. The building is built of limestone rubble with a Dom-le-Mesnil limestone ashlar chain. The inside faces of the walls are rendered. The nave has a concrete floor and the choir is covered with a checkerboard pattern of veined black and red marble and limestone slabs under the pews. The building has a single storey with large semi-circular windows, and the bell tower has three, including an intermediate space on the upper floor and the bell chamber at the top. All the interior spaces have ceilings. The entire building has a slate roof. The nave is covered by a long-sloped roof, the apse by a polygonal hipped roof, the sacristy by a long-sloped and hipped roof and the bell tower by a polygonal spire.
Parking
Closed to the public