In the forest of Ermenonville, a dirt road leads to the foot of an imposing gate whose two doors in solid wood guarantee the discretion of the area. It was on the former zoo of Jean Richard that Mario Luraschi built his "Teepee": a stable, rides and a log house whose unusual V-shaped facade, adorned with a carved totem, breaks with the bourgeois architectural style of Valois constructions.
Read also: Mario Luraschi: "I made lots of friends in the cinema thanks to the horse"
To each his reverie altar. His nostalgia. This trendy eco-habitat sticks less to the spirit of the times than to the desire of its owner to prolong the Indian summer with a youth during which it participated in the animation of the amusement park La Vallée des Peaux-Rouges, created in 1965 by Robert Mottura. He was 18 years old, wore the long hair and actually lived under a teepee.
"I owe it to my passion for the Indians to become a horseman," he says. But let's get around the fire, we will be better off talking. ” In the living room, we sit down squarely in
This article is for subscribers only. You still have 86% to discover.
Subscribe: € 1 for 2 months
cancellable at any time
Enter your emailAlready subscribed? Login