
As you pass through Roscouëdo, take a look at the granite houses with their carefully-crafted bay windows. These are the hamlet's old farmhouses laid the road, the oldest dating from the 17th and 18th centuries. In the 19th century, the village also boasted a bread oven and an oven barn. The one you see as you leave Roscouëdo is more recent.
The hamlet also boasts two typical western Morbihan wells, almost identical and built just a few dozen metres apart. Both are private, but one may have inspired the other. They are circular and surmounted by a lintelled superstructure on a pedestal, adorned with five balls, and human masks, and on one well is a monstrance.