"The manor house is located at no 5, 7 rue Aristide-Briand. It is located in a dead end in a district spared by the bombardments of the Battle of Normandy and therefore is representative of the city of Lisieux as it could appear before the Second World War.
The manor was built in the last quarter of the 15th century and until the beginning of the 16th century. The building bears the coat of arms of Etienne Blosset de Carrouges, Bishop of Lisieux from 1482 to 1505.The building also served as a salt loft.
The mansion was owned by the city from 1985 and the restoration of the building lasted a year. The mansion was fully listed as a historical monument by a decree of December 15, 2003, a chocolate factory has occupied its walls since 2010.
The building is half-timbered. It has a corbel on the courtyard side and on the side of the dead end a porch with two sculpted figures inspired by stories linked to the discovery of the New World, this motif being widespread. "