Antoine-François Peyre (5 April 1739, in Paris – 7 February 1823, in Paris) was a French architect; the younger brother of Marie-Joseph Peyre, and the uncle of Antoine-Marie Peyre [fr].
Biography
He won the Grand prix de l'Académie (later, the Prix de Rome) in 1762, eleven years after his brother, and went to stay at the Académie de France à Rome in 1766. There, he became close friends with a colleague, Antoine Joseph de Bourge [fr], and married his sister, Sophie.
In the 1780s, he completed the chapel at the charity hospital in Saint-Germain-en-Laye (since destroyed),[1] the Pavillon d'Angoulême, for Louis-Charles Guy, secretary to the Comte d'Artois (only the rotunda remains), and the chapel at the City Hall in Soissons.[2]
In 1795, he was elected to the Académie des Beaux-Arts; becoming the first to occupy Seat #2 for architecture. He remained active as an architect through 1812. His well-known projects included creating a new wing for the Château d'Écouen, to replace one that had been demolished to provide a better view (1802-1807), and interior remodeling at the Palais de la Légion d'honneur (1804-1812).
"Peyre (Antoine-François)", In: François-Xavier de Feller, Dictionnaire historique, ou histoire abrégée de hommes qui se sont fait un nom par leur génie, leurs talens, leurs vertus, leurs erreurs or leurs crimes, depuis le commencement du monde jusqu'à nos jours, 8th ed., L. Lefort, 1933, pg.309 (Online)