Magical castles and buildings that inspired Disney
Snow White and The Seven Dwarves - Segovia Castle in Segovia, Spain.
2. Cinderella - Château de Pierrefonds, Paris, France (There were actually 8 castles that inspired the Cinderella castle, including Segovia Castle and Neuschwanstein. )
3. Sleeping Beauty - Neuschwanstein Castle in Bavaria, Germany
4. The Little Mermaid - Chateau de Chillion in Lake Geneva, Switzerland.
5. Beauty and the Beast - The Chateau de Chambord, Loire Valley of Loir-et-Cher, France.
6. Aladdin - Taj Mahal in Agra, India.
7. Mulan - The Forbidden City, Beijing, China.
8. Tangled - Mont Saint-Michel in Normandy, France.
9. Brave - Eilean Donan Castle in Scotland (Dunnottar Castle in Scotland, was also used as inspiration.)
While I am unable to watch the "New Adventures of Cinderella" and I can't tell you if it is indeed as bad as every says... I did find behind-the-scenes pictures of the sets used for the movie, in the set designer's online portfolio! And while you can say everything you want with the scenario being bad or the joke offensive, they still did a very good job with the set - at least from the appearance of these pictures.
The living room ("salon") within Cinderella's house:
The ballroom at the King's palace:
The King's throne-room:
The "Petit Théâtre" (Small Theater) within the King's castle:
The King's bathroom:
The house of the seven dwarves (because yes there's a Snow-White crossover in this movie):
The Fairy Godmother's house (in the swamp - because (s)he's the Swamp Godmother and... its a whole gay joke non-French probably won't get)
The attic of Cinderella's house:
The protagonist's flat right under the roof (yes, meant to parallel Cinderella's attic):
A flat's entryway (of who, I don't know)
The various bedrooms within the King's palace
A garden:
The various courtyards of the King's castle:
Inside the King's castle:
And there's much more pictures where they come from: it is Elodie Monet's online website, the Cinderella page being right here.
Château de la Mothe-Chandeniers is an abandoned castle in France. Its oldest parts were constructed in the early 13th century by its owners, the Bauçay family.