logo
La vasque: How to see the Paris balloon this summer

La vasque: How to see the Paris balloon this summer

Local France24-06-2025
The balloon was reintroduced as a tourist attraction on Saturday and it rose for the first time above Paris' Tuileries garden during the city's street music festival Fête de la Musique.
It will stay anchored in central Paris until September 14th, 2025 and will remain a summer tradition until the 2028 Los Angeles Games.
The giant balloon was first seen during the 2024 Olympics opening ceremony, when it rose into the sky carrying the Olympic flame and officially launched the Games - although due to a clever design the 'flame' is actually water vapour.
Now it's back - as per last summer it will be anchored at ground level in the Tuileries gardens during the day, and will rise up into the sky at sunset.
Advertisement
The takeoff time will change throughout summer as the days get shorter.
It will rise at 10.30pm in June and July, then at 9.30pm in August, and at 8.30pm in September. The balloon will stay lifted until around 2am each night.
Paris' City Hall recommends watching the balloon go up from five locations: Place du Carrousel, the banks of the Seine (between Paris Mint and the National Assembly), the Champs-Élysées, Rue de Rivoli, and the square of the Sacré Cœur in Montmartre.
During the day it is moored on the ground at the Place du Carrousel - this is open to visitors from 10am to 9pm and unlike last summer no tickets are required.
The balloon's scheduled ascent and descent times are available at vasqueparis2024.fr along with any weather-related cancellations or changes to the schedule.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Paris's Georges-Vallerey pool combines a seaside resort with the Olympic spirit
Paris's Georges-Vallerey pool combines a seaside resort with the Olympic spirit

LeMonde

time2 hours ago

  • LeMonde

Paris's Georges-Vallerey pool combines a seaside resort with the Olympic spirit

With its two large concrete pilasters that give it the stature of a Doric temple and its pediment bearing the five Olympic rings, the Georges-Vallerey pool makes an impression as soon as you enter. Inaugurated in 1924 for the Paris Olympic Games, this emblematic pool in the 20 th arrondissement, located above the Place des Lilas, recently reconnected with its past: It was one of the training pools for the Paris 2024 Olympics. With the water temperature set at 27°C, a reduced staff and security provided by France's foreign intelligence agency, the DGSE (whose offices are next door), the pool's brand-new director, Christopher Sadones, was unlikely to forget the logistics involved in the event. "Léon Marchand trained in lane 4," he said. "My only regret is that I didn't dare ask him for a photo." A former lifeguard, water polo player and coach, Sadones, a high-level athlete, is a fitting reflection of this competition pool. Throughout the year, his 50-meter pool attracts strong swimmers from the neighborhood and beyond, some of whom are members of the SCUF (Sporting Club Universitaire de France), whose swimming division is one of the most renowned in Paris. "Here, you can see some truly beautiful freestyles," confirmed the creator of the Instagram account Nageuse Parisienne, dedicated to Paris' swimming pools, who is a regular at the facility and wishes to remain anonymous. "There are those who slap the water with their hands, those who slice through it as if trying to part it. Some movements are quick, others slow and very elongated." The Georges-Vallerey pool boasts another major asset: its large retractable roof, which takes just six minutes to open when the outdoor temperature reaches 25°C, adding a cheerful, seaside feeling to its sporting atmosphere.

New-look Australia focused on LA 2028 at swimming worlds
New-look Australia focused on LA 2028 at swimming worlds

France 24

time12 hours ago

  • France 24

New-look Australia focused on LA 2028 at swimming worlds

The Australians won seven swimming golds at the Paris Olympics but several big names have since retired or are skipping this year's world championships, which begin Sunday. That has opened the door for 10 debutants and Pallister, who made her Olympic bow in Paris, urged them to make the most of the experience. "I think it's important for those on the team this year to really soak in the moment and do their best," said the 23-year-old. "I don't really think it's about the medal table, I think in three years' time is the bigger picture." Australia's most successful Olympian, Emma McKeon, has hung up her goggles as have other stalwarts including Mitch Larkin, Brianna Throssell and Jenna Strauch. Four-time Olympic gold medallist Ariarne Titmus -- who lost her 400m freestyle world record to Canadian Summer McIntosh last month -- is on an extended break. Eleven of Australia's squad in Singapore are aged 20 or under. Veteran Cameron McEvoy, who is appearing at his seventh world championship, said the Australians were a team in transition. "Things come and go, things change, you have to build up from time to time, you can't be constantly at the top and only at the top," said the 31-year-old, the 50m freestyle Olympic champion. "We have the most rookies on our team that I've seen across my whole time, which is exciting too." At just 16, Sienna Toohey came from nowhere to qualify for the 50m and 100m breaststroke. Australia also have high hopes for fellow newcomers Hannah Fredericks (200m backstroke) and Ben Goedemans (800m freestyle), while Ella Ramsay, 21, will contest four events. "A lot of them are very young, they've got a lot of years ahead of them," said McEvoy. "Starting that three years out from the Olympics instead of, say, 2027, one year out, goes a long way too." © 2025 AFP

One year later, the contested legacy of the Paris 2024 Olympics
One year later, the contested legacy of the Paris 2024 Olympics

LeMonde

time14 hours ago

  • LeMonde

One year later, the contested legacy of the Paris 2024 Olympics

It was Friday, July 26, 2024, at dawn. Just hours before the opening of the Paris Olympic Games, panic spread among organizers. Trains were paralyzed by a "massive attack" on the TGV high-speed rail network, and torrents of rain were forecast for the capital. The Games had not even begun, and were already turning into a nightmare. But by midnight that same day, France was rubbing its eyes in disbelief, dazzled by the opening ceremony imagined by Thomas Jolly along the Seine. Soon after, the first gold medals for the French team poured in before sold-out arenas. France quickly plunged into a fervor that, for a fortnight, restored a sense of national pride to a country divided by the snap elections earlier that summer. One year later, what remains of that "enchanted interlude," apart from memories of shared jubilation in transformed venues? The Games' organizers promised a physical legacy. The Olympic Aquatics Center opened to the public on June 2, 2025, in Saint-Denis, north of Paris. The seven other swimming pools built or renovated in Seine-Saint-Denis for the Games helped address the underpriviliged Paris suburbs' shortage of sports facilities, and the athletes' and media villages gave rise to 4,000 new homes.

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