A house is the slowest of possessions. The work of maintaining it well — the gardens, the staff, the seasonal cadence by which a residence comes into use and is again put to rest — requires a steady attention that few owners are positioned to provide themselves.
The Maison's residences practice attends to that work, in the houses of its members, in the manner agreed at the outset of the relationship. The arrangements are particular to each house, which is as it should be. We do not impose a method.
Where a member contemplates the acquisition of a new residence, the Maison advises on the property itself, on the people who will be required to keep it, and on the particularities of the locality that the agent will not have mentioned. We are unhurried in this work, by preference.
Members enquire through their dedicated office.