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France
Normandy
Évreux

Les Barils

The best traffic-free bike rides around Les Barils

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Gravel biking around Les Barils offers a diverse landscape characterized by serene, rolling hills, extensive forests, and open fields. The region features a mix of unpaved tracks, forest paths, and dedicated greenways, providing varied terrain for gravel cyclists. Waterways like the River Avre contribute to the scenic beauty, while the overall elevation profile includes gentle hills rather than significant climbs. This blend of natural features creates an accessible environment for exploring no traffic gravel bike trails.

Best no traffic gravel…

Last updated: May 23, 2026

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#1.

Chapelle de Réveillon – Dovecote by the pond loop from Moussonvilliers

27.7km

01:45

160m

160m

Moderate gravel ride. Good fitness required. Mostly paved surfaces. Suitable for all skill levels.

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Moderate

Easy gravel ride. Great for any fitness level. Mostly paved surfaces. Suitable for all skill levels.

Easy
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Easy gravel ride. Great for any fitness level. Mostly paved surfaces. Suitable for all skill levels.

Easy

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Popular around Les Barils

Traffic-free bike rides around Les Barils

Traffic-free bike rides around Les Barils

Tips from the Community

AeroGrail By Chris 🇨🇵 🏔
August 27, 2025, Église Notre Dame

The church is closely inserted between the castle park and the houses of the village, which presents a harmonious ensemble of buildings from the 18th and early 19th centuries, combining flint and brick with lime plaster tinted with ochre. You have to step back a little to see its apse, the foundation of which probably dates back to the Romanesque period. Next to the entrance gable, dressed in Grison rubble, the bell tower was built in 1867 (according to the inscription preserving the names of the mason Gelin and the carpenter Hallier, with those of the priest, Abbot Porcher, the mayor, Viscount des Brosses, and the municipal councilors). The nave is extended by a rounded apse, with thick walls pierced by widely splayed semicircular openings, between which are placed the statues of Saint Sebastian, the Virgin and Child, Saint Michael and the dragon, and a holy bishop. On the "perque" (or beam of glory), a large Christ surrounded by the Virgin and Saint John. The transverse chapel, on the right, from the 15th or 16th century, vaulted with ribs resting on four pendentives with a central key carved like lace, was the seat of the brotherhoods. It houses the more recent statues of Saint Sebastian, the Virgin, Saint Michael and a holy bishop. The seigneury of Chennebrun, which belonged successively to Saint-Simon de Courtomer (1650), Caumont de la Force (1670), Grimoard de Beauvoir (1688), Laval Montmorency (1714), d'Espinay Saint-Luc (1765), etc., was acquired during the Restoration by Jacques-Alexandre Giroult des Brosses, whose father had been mayor of Dreux in 1771. In the seigneurial chapel on the left, inscriptions recall the names and dates of the members of this family linked for more than four generations to the life of the commune. We are grateful to them for having admirably maintained the castle, whose 18th century façade and the entrance to the park are visible from the gate. Their coat of arms appears on the stained glass window of this chapel, where we recognize in the center those of a Laval-Montmorency, Lord of Chennebrun, knight of honor of the Duchess of Orléans, master of the cavalry camp, who died in 1757, as indicated by his funerary slab on the threshold. The numerous 19th century stained glass windows with the names of the donors are worth seeing in detail. The one in the center, in the choir, lifts us to the sky with Our Lady of the Assumption. The statue of Mary, patron saint of Chennebrun, never ceases to watch over her church.

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The church dedicated to Saint Christopher was under the patronage of the Abbey of Saint-Père de Chartres in the 12th century. Of Romanesque origin, the building was extensively enlarged and remodeled during the 16th and 19th centuries; it is currently undergoing a general restoration. This church owes its fame to the automobile pilgrimage held on the last Sunday in July. The single-aisled building, preceded by a porch, consists of a nave and a choir with a recessed flat chevet. To the south are the bell tower and a chapel. The use of traditional materials in this part of Normandy—flint and grison, a locally quarried ferruginous stone—indicates that the oldest parts of the building are of medieval origin. The nave is built of rubble masonry (grison and flint) set in mortar. In dressed stone, Grison was used to form, on one side, the corners of the exposed gable of the nave and, on the other, the corner buttresses, to frame the small arched openings, since walled up but still visible on the north and south walls, as well as the pointed arch of the portal. The same approach is found in the choir. The elevations are finished with a quarter-round cornice, part of which is also made of Grison stone. The use of brick corresponds to the 19th-century interventions, in two phases of work whose completion date is unknown. An examination of the construction reveals a first phase of repairs to the openings, particularly in the choir and nave, where large rectangular openings with curved lintels were created, the bricks of which are light in color. This was followed by further interventions with pointed arched openings framed in purplish brick, some of which replaced the rectangular openings of the previous phase. The porch features an ornate gable of light-colored, rendered brickwork, flanked by brick and chipped flint pilasters, and pierced by a central bay framed in brick and topped with a niche; the side sections are timber-framed on a masonry base. The southern flank of the building was added during the 16th century to a vast chapel and a bell tower, made of rubble blockwork, in which bays are pierced, framed in limestone, with curved profiles in the case of the bell tower. Restoration work has revealed several molded courses on the south face of the chapel, corresponding to a bay removed during later restorations, which confirm the dating of this part of the building. This chapel opens onto the nave through a large arcade adorned with several rows of moldings, resting on simple square piers devoid of decoration, with animal figures (reused?) at their bases, unearthed during the restoration work. The interior is remarkably simple, with whitewashed walls and geometric stained-glass windows. Only the choir is more ornate; its entrance is marked by a stone arch resting on hexagonal piers with historiated capitals, where a sculpted frieze of foliate ornaments, figures, and a coat of arms unfolds. The church has a painted faux-marble altarpiece, above which are visible traces of incomplete wall paintings depicting draperies. The rafter frame forming a truss was straightened and reinforced by restoring the removed or weakened kingposts and tie beams. According to tradition, the carpenters left the mark of their work by sculpting a scalloped ... The bell tower's belfry has also undergone a complete restoration. For this restoration, designed to strengthen the church and enhance its architecture, the Sauvegarde de l'Art Français (French Art Protection Agency) granted €10,000 in 2005.

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The church is located near a departmental road and is surrounded by a cemetery. Church oriented with a longitudinal plan composed of a single nave. The entrance to the building is via a porch body. An annex building is attached to the north side of the choir. The western facade of the porch body rises on two levels delimited by a projecting cornice. It is pierced by a low-arched door as well as a rose window in the upper part. The bell tower, of polygonal plan, is positioned on the ridge of the roof. It is covered with a polygonal spire surmounted by a ridge cross and has two roof eaves. The building is covered with a gable roof. That of the annex building ends in a hip. The side walls are pierced with arched bays and supported by buttresses. The annex building is pierced by a quadrangular window and door. The buttresses of the choir bear witness to the Romanesque origins of the church. The nave, built in the 16th century, was enlarged in the 19th century by a bay to the west. The bays of the building were re-pierced around 1822.

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Église Saint Madeleine is a church where beautiful various statues of Saints, famous and less famous. The reason for so many different statues is that the school of sculpture was established here.

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Located in a green setting, this chapel of Romanesque origin has preserved all of its 16th century painted decor. An excellent overview of the artistic production of the period. Romanesque in origin and then remodeled in the 12th and 15th centuries, the chapel of Réveillon is one of the rare churches that have preserved their wall paintings. The richness of its treatment and themes is exceptional. We can still read on these walls a profusion of details such as a frieze of arabesques where birds, fruits and flowers are intertwined. Its varied themes represent, among others, The Dict of the Dead and the Three Living, the Passion, the Temptation, the Lives of the Saints and Martyrs, Saint Christopher, etc.

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A flowery village, Moussonvilliers takes particular care of the surroundings of its church. By walking along flower beds, you can access it via the covered porch, off-centre with respect to the axis of the gable, the corners of which are reinforced with double buttresses. The church has two naves of unequal width, gathered under the same roof. Built in the 16th century, its poor condition probably required the alterations carried out in the 19th century. From the outside, you can see in particular the use of bricks for the repair of the windows and the cornices of the roof. Inside, between the two parallel naves, the four stone pillars cut into a prism, dating from the construction, carry a wide horizontal band along the entire length of the building (probably made of large beams covered in plaster, replacing the old stone arcades). This band reinforces the beams on which the "tie beams" of the exposed framework rest, and at the same time supports the fall of the two plaster vaults. These structural modifications nevertheless respect the general appearance of the building. At the central altar, the tabernacle evokes the parable of the Good Shepherd who carries the lost sheep on his shoulders. Above, the classical style altarpiece in wood with decorations enhanced with gold, is decorated in the center with a large painting of the Assumption of Mary taken up to heaven by angels. The landscape placed very low accentuates the upward movement of the composition. This painting, of a certain artistic quality, dated 1855, is signed by Claire Hombcrg. Two statues frame it in the niches: on the left, a pretty Virgin in polychrome stone from the 16th century. Crowned with fleurs-de-lys and draped in a blue cloak, she holds the infant Jesus, who stretches out his arm towards the object she is presenting to him (an apple or a bird? We do not know because the right hand is broken). On the other side, in polychrome wood from the 18th century, Saint Catherine of Alexandria reading a book, was once invoked as the patron saint of schools because of her in-depth education. She had in fact publicly and successfully refuted the erroneous theses of several philosophers whom she converted to the Christian faith. She suffered martyrdom in the 4th century. Other statues deserve particular interest. Leaning against a pillar, the 16th century, in stone, of Saint John the Baptist, his cloak raised over his bare legs, presenting the Mystic Lamb placed on the large book of the Bible. And also, from the same period, the small polychrome stone sculpture depicting the education of the Virgin Mary by Saint Anne. It is difficult to see the details because it is placed in a niche above the door. But it is a precious ancient testimony of the devotion to the patron saint of our parish Sainte-Anne-du-Perche. Finally, to the left of the door, the polychrome wooden statue of Saint Paul. The expression on his face reflects somewhat the ardor of his vocation as an apostle of Christianity. Converted by his vision of the road to Damascus, he devoted himself entirely to preaching the doctrine of Christ the Redeemer, traveling through the countries of the Hellenized East to found and lead new communities of baptized people. Thanks to him, the evangelical message was not limited to populations of Jewish culture, but was addressed to people throughout the world. His writings are an ever-current and living source of the doctrine of the Church, the body of Christ.

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Located on the edge of the plateau that dominates the Vigne valley to the north, the church of Rueil is of great interest both for its architecture and its furnishings. The construction of the nave dates back to the Romanesque period (11th-13th century) but this nave was modified in the 16th century by the opening of semi-circular windows and consolidated by powerful buttresses. The bell tower with a pyramidal spire on an octagonal base, pierced with louvers, is covered with slate like most of the bell towers of Thymerais and the Avre valley. Inside, one is struck by the size of the nave covered with a shingle vault resting on tie beams whose ends are sculpted into monsters' mouths.

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The Madeleine Tower overlooks a beautiful square, surrounded by numerous terraces where it is good to quench your thirst after your exercise!

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Frequently Asked Questions

What kind of terrain can I expect on the no-traffic gravel bike trails around Les Barils?

The trails around Les Barils offer a diverse mix of surfaces, perfect for gravel biking. You'll find a combination of paved roads, well-maintained dirt tracks, and scenic forest paths. Many routes incorporate 'voies vertes' (greenways) like the Bois Francs Greenway, which provide smooth sections, often alongside more rustic rural paths and forest tracks, ensuring a varied and engaging ride.

Are there any easy, beginner-friendly no-traffic gravel routes in the area?

Yes, there are several routes suitable for beginners or those looking for a relaxed ride. For example, the Bois Francs Greenway – Bois Francs Castle loop from Chennebrun is rated as easy, covering about 30 kilometers with minimal elevation gain. Another easy option is the Le Trianon Cinema – Saint-Hilaire Church loop from Verneuil-sur-Avre, which is around 22 kilometers long.

What natural features or landscapes will I see while gravel biking near Les Barils?

You'll experience the serene, rolling landscapes of Normandy, characterized by a beautiful mix of fields, woodlands, and lakes. The magnificent Bois-Francs Forest is a prominent feature, offering verdant trails and a sense of natural immersion. You might also encounter sections along the River Avre, adding to the picturesque scenery.

Are there any interesting landmarks or attractions along these no-traffic routes?

Absolutely! Many routes offer opportunities to discover local points of interest. You can cycle past the impressive, albeit abandoned, Bois Francs Castle. The Bois Francs Greenway itself is a highlight, featuring information panels about the region's history. Near Verneuil-sur-Avre, you can explore the charming Medieval town centre or see the historic La Madeleine Church.

Are the gravel bike trails around Les Barils suitable for families?

Yes, many of the no-traffic routes are well-suited for families, especially those that utilize the 'voies vertes' or greenways. These paths are generally flat and separated from vehicle traffic, providing a safe and enjoyable environment for riders of all ages. The easy-rated routes, like the Bois Francs Greenway – Bois Francs Castle loop, are excellent choices for a family outing.

What is the typical length and duration of a no-traffic gravel bike ride in this area?

The no-traffic gravel bike routes around Les Barils typically range from 20 to 30 kilometers in length. For instance, the Chapelle de Réveillon – Dovecote by the pond loop is about 27 kilometers and takes around 1 hour 45 minutes to 2 hours to complete, depending on your pace. The Bois Francs Greenway – Bois Francs Castle loop is slightly longer at 30 kilometers, taking a similar amount of time.

Can I find loop routes for gravel biking near Les Barils?

Yes, all the featured no-traffic gravel bike routes in this guide are designed as convenient loops. This allows you to start and finish at the same point without needing to arrange transport back. Examples include the Chapelle de Réveillon – Dovecote by the pond loop from Moussonvilliers and the Bois Francs Greenway – Bois Francs Castle loop from Chennebrun.

Are there options for parking or public transport access to the trailheads?

While specific parking details for each trailhead vary, many routes start from or pass through towns like Verneuil-sur-Avre or smaller villages, where public parking is generally available. Verneuil-sur-Avre, being a larger town, also offers more options for public transport connections, making it a convenient starting point for routes like the Le Trianon Cinema – Saint-Hilaire Church loop.

What is the best time of year to go gravel biking in Les Barils?

The region around Les Barils is generally pleasant for gravel biking from spring through autumn. Spring offers lush greenery and blooming landscapes, while autumn provides beautiful fall colors. Summer is also great, but it's advisable to start earlier in the day to avoid the midday heat. Always check the local weather forecast before heading out.

Are there any cafes or places to stop for refreshments along the no-traffic gravel routes?

Many routes pass through or near small villages and towns, such as Verneuil-sur-Avre, which offer cafes, bakeries, and restaurants where you can refuel. It's a good idea to check the route details or a map beforehand to identify potential stops, especially on longer rides, and carry sufficient water and snacks.

What kind of wildlife might I encounter on the gravel trails in Les Barils?

Given the region's abundant forests and serene countryside, you might spot various local wildlife. Keep an eye out for deer, wild boar (especially in forested areas), and a variety of bird species. The tranquil environment of the Bois-Francs Forest and other wooded sections provides a natural habitat for many creatures, offering a chance for peaceful observation.

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