•
Théâtre de la Loge Olympique, on the
Rue de la Victoire, Paris (
9th arrondissement). • His own home, and a factory, on the Rue Richer, Paris (9th arrondissement), 1788 : On land acquired in association with a man named "Goyer", Damesme built his own house and a factory, for a Flemish brewer called "Weel". • Multiple buildings, on the
Rue Saint-Honoré, Paris (
1st arrondissement), 1806: For the
biens nationaux, Damesme designed a project on the site of the convent of
The Three Sisters of the Conception. • Châtillon hotel, (Numbers 136-140) on the
Rue du Bac, Paris (7th arrondissement) • Château de Sillery, Épinay-sur-Orge (
Essonne): Damesme designed the château and the gardens. • Château de Viry, Viry-Châtillon (Essonne): Landscaping for the
Duchess of Raguse, née
Anne Marie Hortense Perrégaux (1779-1855)
, wife of Marshal Auguste de Marmont, who inherited the estate from her father, the banker Jean-Frédéric Perrégaux, in 1808. Destroyed in 1950. Only the Gothic pavilion remains. •
Château de Courson,
Courson-Monteloup (Essonne): he designed some outbuildings and stables for the Duke of Padua. • Town Hall of
Magny-en-Vexin (
Val-d'Oise). •
Royal Theatre of La Monnaie,
Brussels: Damesme was called upon to rebuild the old theater, which was demolished due to safety concerns in 1818. The new building was opened on 25 May 1819. After a fire in 1855, the building was reconstructed according to the plans. •
House of Jacques-Louis David, Brussels, 1818–1819. • New Prisons of Brussels ==References==