logo
How Paris Continues To Conquer Olympics Fans A Year After The Games

How Paris Continues To Conquer Olympics Fans A Year After The Games

Forbes10 hours ago

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)
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 humans in 1783, setting the stage for Charles and Orville Wright 120 years later. Jacques-Étienne happened to launch his balloon in the middle of the Tuileries, and by no coincidence, the Olympic cauldron has been placed exactly where he took off for his fateful flight.Newly rebranded as the 'Paris cauldron,' the balloon's rise over the city will be a nightly occurrence on summer evenings for the next three years. Though it appears to house a flame, the whole contraption is really trompe l'oeil: its golden glow comes from a combination of LED lights, mist-squirting jets, and high-pressure fans.
LED lights, fans, and high-powered jets provide the cauldron's flame-like effect. (Photo by Ezra ...)
According to city estimates, Paris's newest iconic attraction drew more than 250,000 admirers last summer alone. Less popular so far are the 'baignades en Seine,' or sites where you can swim in the Seine River, an activity banned 100 years ago due to poor water quality but recently brought back in select areas and trumpeted as of the Games's great legacies. (Daily quality testing determines whether the water is actually sanitary enough for bathers to dip into.)More intriguing for the less adventurous may be the planned flotilla procession down the Seine set for July 27, a year and a day after the magically rainy Opening Ceremony that featured Lady Gaga, Celine Dion, and a bevy of small boats ferrying soaked and thrilled Olympic athletes down the river. New IOC President Kirsty Coventry will be among those in attendance.
Olympians from Croatia wave flags aboard a boat in the floating parade on the Seine at the start of ... More the Olympic Opening Ceremony in Paris. (Photo by Clodagh Kilcoyne - Pool/Getty Images)
Nor does Paris plan to stop at just the cauldron. Plans for a 'Monument of Champions' with the names of the 2024 Olympians and Paralympians will also be revealed, while the half-submerged statues of ten extraordinary Frenchwomen that made up part of the river decor during the Opening Ceremony will be unveiled in their new residence near the Adidas Arena, which held rhythmic gymnastics and badminton and was one of only two new build venues at the Games. As the Olympics expands its reach, Paris of all places certainly knows how to prolong the magic of the past.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Report – France Star Not Ready To Start For Inter Milan Vs Fluminense In Club World Cup Showdown
Report – France Star Not Ready To Start For Inter Milan Vs Fluminense In Club World Cup Showdown

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Report – France Star Not Ready To Start For Inter Milan Vs Fluminense In Club World Cup Showdown

Report – France Star Not Ready To Start For Inter Milan Vs Fluminense In Club World Cup Showdown Striker Marcus Thuram is reportedly not ready to start for Inter Milan in today's Club World Cup round of sixteen match against Fluminense. This according to today's print edition of Turin-based newspaper Tuttosport, via FCInterNews. Advertisement At stake is a place in the quarterfinals, where they would meet the winner of the other round of sixteen match today between Manchester City and Al-Hilal. There are some fitness issues heading into today's match. For example, striker Francesco Pio Esposito has reportedly pulled out of training for Inter in the last couple days. The 20-year-old had reportedly been the favourite to start after his start turn against River Plate. Meanwhile, Davide Frattesi has returned to Italy for injury tests. The 25-year-old will play no part at the Club World Cup this summer. Marcus Thuram Not Fit To Start For Inter Vs Fluminense MUNICH, GERMANY – MAY 31: Marcus Thuram of FC Internazionale looks on during the UEFA Champions League Final 2025 between Paris Saint-Germain and FC Internazionale Milano at Munich Football Arena on May 31, 2025 in Munich, Germany. (Photo by) On the other hand, striker Marcus Thuram has recovered from injury. Advertisement The 27-year-old will certainly be part of the Nerazzurri's squad against Fluminense. He came off the bench against Monterrey but missed group stage matches against Urawa Red Diamonds and River Plate. That is certainly a boost for Inter coach Cristian Chivu. Particularly with Pio Esposito out. However, reports Tuttosport, Thuram will not be fit enough to start today's match. Having just come back after a couple weeks out, he'll need to ease back into the lineup.

Michelle Kang takes over as president of Ligue 1 team Lyon as John Textor resigns
Michelle Kang takes over as president of Ligue 1 team Lyon as John Textor resigns

Associated Press

timean hour ago

  • Associated Press

Michelle Kang takes over as president of Ligue 1 team Lyon as John Textor resigns

American businesswoman Michele Kang has taken over as president of seven-time French champion Lyon after John Textor resigned following the club's relegation over financial irregularities. The South Korea-born Kang is also majority owner of the Lyon's women's team — OL Lyonnes — and has been on Lyon's board of directors since 2023. Lyon said in a statement that Kang will play an 'active role' in leading the club's appeal against the relegation handed down last Tuesday by the French league's soccer watchdog, known as DNCG. The case is expected to be heard within the next week. That ruling could also decide whether Crystal Palace will be allowed to play in next season's Europa League, which Lyon also qualified for. Textor also held a 43% stake in Palace — which he has agreed to sell to New York Jets owner Woody Johnson — and UEFA has rules against clubs with the same owner playing the same competition. Lyon added that Textor has also resigned from the board of directors. He became Lyon president three years ago, taking over from longstanding incumbent Jean-Michel Aulas, who sold to Textor's Eagle Football Holdings. The 66-year-old Kang will be supported in her role by Michael Gerlinger, the general manager of Eagle Football Holdings. 'A highly respected figure in European football administration, Michael brings over two decades of experience in governance, regulatory affairs and sports operations,' Lyon said in its statement. Why did Lyon get relegated? Lyon's run of Ligue 1 titles from 2001-08 made it the powerhouse of French soccer. Since Paris Saint-Germain took over at the top, fortunes have steadily dipped for Lyon. The decision to relegate the club followed an audit of its finances by the DNCG, with Lyon's current debt estimated at 175 million euros ($203 million). The DNCG had already provisionally relegated Lyon to Ligue 2 in November, with the club reporting at the time that it had more than 500 million euros ($581 million) of debt. A transfer ban was also imposed in the January transfer window. News of Lyon's relegations was met by dismay from Lyon fans, with one historic supporters group — The Bad Gones — leading calls for Textor's immediate resignation. The club shop was tagged with a blunt message urging him to go. A Champions League finalist five years ago, Lyon narrowly lost to Manchester United in the Europa League quarterfinals this season and missed out on a cash windfall when it failed to qualify for next season's Champions League after finishing sixth in Ligue 1. Three weeks ago, Lyon received a much-needed cash injection by selling coveted playmaker Rayan Cherki to Manchester City for 36 million euros, while high earners like forward Alexandre Lacazette left the club. But it wasn't enough to convince the DNCG that Lyon's books were in order, a task which now falls to Kang. Ligue 1 resumes in mid-August with Lyon scheduled to play at Lens if it wins the appeal. More about Michelle Kang Forbes estimates Kang's worth at $1.2 billion. Kang assumed majority ownership of Lyon one year after taking over the Washington Spirit women's team in 2022 when average gates were around 3,000. They are now around 15,000. She also heads Kynisca Sports International, a women-led, multi-team global sports organization. Last November, she pledged $30 million to U.S. Soccer over five years for women and girls — the largest single investment specifically for women's and girl's programs in the federation's history. As well as her donation to U.S. Soccer, in August 2024 her Kynisca Sports organization set up a $50-million (£39.2 million) global investment fund to help improve the health and performance of elite female athletes. Lyon's women's team — a record eight-time Champions League winner — will enjoy a new, female-specific training campus when it opens in July 2026. The women's team will also share the Groupama Stadium with the men's side. Last season's women's Champions League semfinal against rival PSG attracted 38,466 spectators. ___ AP soccer:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store