The monastic complex includes a
Romanesque abbey, a
cloister and convent buildings. The monastery was fortified, as can still be seen from the west turret. Sold during the Revolution, the abbey suffered a lot of destruction. The fortified
apse was razed and replaced by a more modest and simple apse. The cloister rested on the church to the south, the abbey dwelling to the west, the kitchen and refectory to the north, the
chapter house (with the dormitory on the first floor) to the east. The south, east and north galleries of the cloister have disappeared; only the west gallery remains attached to the abbey dwelling. The building housing the chapter hall collapsed in the second half of the 18th century. The refectory, a large rectangular room with
Gothic decor built in the fourteenth century, lost its roof, and its southern wall collapsed in 1987. But the remains of the painted decoration and the carved vaults can still be seen. The abbey church preserves a magnificent carved
bell tower, a Romanesque portal and another multi-lobed portal. In the nave, a capital, used as a baptismal font, represents the legend of Ménélée, the patron saint of the monastery. A paleontological museum has been set up in part of the abbey. On the first floor, there are 15th century murals, including a Roman calendar. ==Notes==