- St. Eutrope tower Langourla:
- The Tower Saint-Eutrope dates from the thirteenth century but is listed as the sixteenth in the base Mérimée (database of Historical Monuments).
- Octagonal in shape and built of stone, it has four openings on ribbed arches. It is flanked to the north of a small turret that houses a spiral staircase. There is indeed a small room under the roof. On the pillars, one can observe the image of Langourla.
- This tower is what remains of the ancient church of Saint-Eutrope Langourla. Indeed, the latter undergoing the weight of years had to be demolished completely. But David Bishop, Bishop of Saint-Brieuc, intervenes in 1866, to be preserved what remains today. When the demolition of this church began in 1869, so we kept the tower. She then became the chapel of the dead, watching over the old cemetery twelve centuries to his foot.
- It was also a place of pilgrimage for St. Eutrope had, say, the power to cure dropsy and migraine. The pilgrims had to apply his foot tower on their ailments, and then install this earth in its place. Some have therefore brought this land to their patients before returning to replace it.
- In the late 1950s he was again subject to demolish. Indeed, overgrown by ivy, its frame was giving serious signs of fatigue. St. Eutrope tower was again saved by being listed building May 19 1965. It was then renovated. The cemetery, he was transferred to the output of the village in the late 1950s a small area of greenery and flowers replaced.
- Langourla greenery of Theatre and its lake:
- A lake is located below the village, the City Ducas.
- Nearby there is the old Colombel career. Much of the granite used in the town (and beyond) in the early twentieth century had this career. It is now converted into air theater and hosts, among others, a jazz festival since 1996.
- A mountain bike goes around the town through each of the locations mentioned above.