How Paris Continues To Conquer Olympics Fans A Year After The Games
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The reinstalled cauldron from the Paris 2024 Games Olympic Cauldron rises above the Louvre and River … More Seine during the Fete De La Musique 2025, on June 21, 2025 in Paris, France. The basin designed by Mathieu Lehanneur will lift off into the sky of the French capital each summer evening from June 21 to September 14 for the next three years. (Photo by Kiran Ridley/Getty Images) Getty Images The balloon has gone up and Paris is once again enchanted. The elegant spherical creation that housed the Olympic flame during last summer’s Paris Games has returned to its floating perch above the Tuileries garden between the Louvre Museum and the Champs-Elysées, a central spot visible from many of the city’s grandest monuments and bateaux-mouches floating down the Seine. En bref, Paris has mastered post-Olympic fusion tourism. Come for the, well, everything, and stay to check out the spot that has made for some of the most spectacular Olympic imagery ever. With this coup de ballon, Paris has pulled off the kind of pivot most Olympic host cities have not been able to manage once the Games have ended. 1992 made a tourist destination of Barcelona and 2012 transformed London’s formerly downtrodden East End. In the shadow of these successes, there have also been some dismal failures: see de Janeiro, Rio, where the Olympic Park seemed to fall to pieces only months after the Games ended, and Sarajevo, where disused venues from the 1984 Winter Olympics are greatly in need of refurbishment following the Bosnian War. From the Paris Olympics to the past The helium-powered Olympic cauldron was imagined as a balloon in homage to the Montgolfier brothers Joseph-Michel and Jacques-Étienne. (The French word for hot air balloon is in fact montgolfier.) Jacques-Étienne piloted the first recorded balloon ascent by…
Filed under: News - @ June 30, 2025 1:24 am