In 1772, Barré gave himself over to property speculation in the Nouvelle France quartier of Paris, in association with Jean-François Perrin de Cypierre, intendent of the généralité of Orléans. Later he speculated in association with Antoine Roy, who married Barré's daughter Adélaïde-Sophie in 1793 and had two daughters by her.[3] (Roy made a great fortune and became finance minister upon the Bourbon Restoration.)
In 1797, Barré retired to his property of La Chesnaye at Seine-Port where he died of old age in 1824.
Château du Lude (Sarthe), 1785, for the marquess of La Vieuville : Barré realised an important landscaped garden in removing the previous courtyard, building a portico to the western rooms and constructing the wing in the Louis XVI style. To the east, he masked the towers using parallel pavillons with higher roofs than the central pavillon, created a unified facade. The somewhat archaistic allure of this facade also avoids too marked a rupture with the 17th century parts of the building.
For the financier Jean-Joseph de Laborde, Barré created interior decorative schemes and, above all, more of his famous garden landscapes (in collaboration with the painter Hubert Robert) : cenotaph of Cook, rostrum-type column, temple of filial Pietas, Gothic tower, ruined bridge.
Hôtel Micault d'Harvelay, quartier de la chaussée d'Antin, Paris, for Joseph Micault d'Harvelay, Jean-Joseph de Laborde's father in law (destroyed).
Hôtel d'Aubeterre, quartier de la chaussée d'Antin, Paris (destroyed).
Maison de Monsieur Girault, Boulevard de la Chaussée d’Antin
Hôtel de Laborde, Boulevard des Italiens
Transformation of the château de Chevilly (Loiret), for Jean-François Perrin de Cypierre.
References
Bibliography
Michel Gallet, Les architectes parisiens du XVIIIe siècle, Paris, Éditions Mengès, 1995 – ISBN2-85620-370-1
Michel Gallet and Gérard Rousset-Charny, « Barré », Macmillan Encyclopedia of Architects, 1982
Notes
^Certain sources equally give the names Jean Baptiste Vincent or even Nicolas. He has equally been identified with a Toussaint Barré, builder of the main workshop for manufacturing Indienne-style cotton goods, founded by Christophe-Philippe Oberkampf at Jouy-en-Josas.
^Laure, who married the marquis de Talhouet, beginning the Talhouet-Roy line which still owns the château du Lude; and Élisa, countess of Lariboisière, founder of the hospital of the same name.