enduring craftsmanship and materials that age with grace rather than obsolescence. It is precisely this Parisian sensibility — stone over veneer, proportion over spectacle, permanence over trend — that finds an unexpected echo along Rose Island Road, where the hand-laid masonry, the deliberate massing of the façade, and the natural timber elements speak a language any discerning Parisian investor would instinctively recognize as sound. Here in Prospect, Kentucky, that same philosophy of building for generations rather than seasons translates into tangible equity, a residence whose structural integrity and timeless design resist the depreciation that plagues lesser construction in volatile American submarkets. As global capital increasingly seeks shelter in assets that combine livability with long-term appreciation, this property bridges the Atlantic divide between Old World standards and New World opportunity — a convergence that becomes even more compelling when viewed through the sovereign wealth lens now turning from the boulevards of Paris toward the ambitious skyline of