In 1963, Gaveau went bankrupt. This led to the sale of the Gaveau building to an insurance company, and it was destined to be destroyed for the construction of a car park. Chantal and Jean-Marie Fournier, a couple of passionate musicians, bought the hall in 1976. In 1982, the house was listed in the inventory and then classified as a
Historic Monument in 1992. Chantal and Jean-Marie Fournier then sought to have it restored, the condition of the venue gradually declining. Subsidies were obtained, and the work was carried out by
Alain-Charles Perrot the chief architect of the Monuments Historiques. The hall reopened on 8 January 2001. It was restored in a more sober way than before, i.e. by seeking to recover the colours and ornaments of 1907. In October 2024 it was announced that the concert hall had been bought for 8 million euros by Jean-Marc Dumontet, a businessman and arts promoter at the time owner of six venues in Paris (Bobino, le Théâtre Antoine, le Théâtre Libre, la Scène Libre, Le Grand Point-Virgule et Le Point-Virgule). == Works premiered at Salle Gaveau ==