After the death of the Comte de Breugnon, the mansion was split up: the part closest to the town hall, known at the time as “La maison neuve” or “La grande maison”, was leased to a merchant and then sold in 1806 to Gabriel Bourdoulous, a manufacturer; Antoine Maillard signed a lease for the part bordering the Pont d’Aiguillon and the Rue du Pavé. At the end of the 18th century, it became the Hôtel du Grand Turc, a sign that the innkeeper had transferred from the Place de la Poissonnerie.
In September 1816, a new tenant, Pierre-Charles Lardet, named the establishment Hôtel de l’Europe, then Hôtel de Paris in 1823, after buying a third of the building from the heirs of Baron Jean-Baptiste de Coëtlosquet.
In 1846, Mr Lardet carried out renovations and renamed his inn Hôtel de l’Europe. Since then, the hotel has undergone extensions (1885, 1892, 1929), extensions and renovations, but has never changed its name. The former Hôtel de Breugnon was restored to its former glory in 1929, when Louis Patault extended the Hôtel de l’Europe.