December 23, 2024

Paris 2024 medals to include ‘piece’ of Eiffel Tower

Paris 2024 medals to include ‘piece’ of Eiffel Tower. PARIS 2024

The 5,084 medals that will be awarded to athletes at this year’s Olympic and Paralympic Games in Paris will include an original piece in the shape of a hexagon taken from the Eiffel Tower, organisers announced on Thursday as they unveiled the design created by Chaumet.

An original piece of the Eiffel Tower will be included in the medals awarded to athletes at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games. A hexagonal piece of iron has been taken from the French capital’s most emblematic monument, representing the image of the city. It will be an original piece that will be placed in the centre.

This was announced by the organisers when they presented their design on Thursday. The 5,084 gold, silver and bronze medals will have a six-sided metal medallion set like a precious stone. The medallion was designed by the elite French jewellers Chaumet. “We wanted to offer a piece of the 1889 Eiffel Tower to all the medallists of the Paris Olympic and Paralympic Games,” said the head of the local organising committee, Tony Estanguet, in statements collected by AFP.

The ultimate reward for a victory or a podium finish!

They carry in their hearts an actual fragment of the Eiffel Tower.

Here are the #Paris2024 Olympic and Paralympic medals.@Olympics @Paralympics pic.twitter.com/08VLwyVwq6

— Paris 2024 (@Paris2024) February 8, 2024

They “combine our most precious metals – gold, silver and bronze – with our country’s most precious metal, from this treasure that is Eiffel Tower”.

The design by Chaumet, whose creations have adorned the aristocracy and the elite since 1780, is also characterised by a circular arrangement of ridges designed to catch the light and evoke the rays of the sun. The iron hexagon, a shape reminiscent of the outline of mainland France, is held in place by six spurs at each corner. These are designed to resemble the rivets used on the Eiffel Tower. A spectacular design.

The metal was taken from a scrap metal warehouse in Paris by the operating company that maintains the 330-metre landmark, affectionately known in France as the ‘Old Lady’. “We found out that over the years, during the maintenance of the Eiffel Tower, they were forced to remove part of the original structure,” explained Thierry Reboul, director of ceremonies, at a preview of the medals for AFP and other media.

“We used those pieces. There were more than enough,” he added. It is undoubtedly a novel idea. And one that is full of affection, given the importance of the Eiffel Tower to Parisians and the French.

L’or olympique, le graal d’une vie d’un sportif de haut niveau !

Chaque édition des Jeux a sa médaille 🥇

Celle de #Paris2024 est française, rayonnante et unique avec un fragment de fer d’origine de la tour Eiffel de 1889 !@Olympics @jeuxolympiques pic.twitter.com/prp23OXWUa

— Paris 2024 (@Paris2024) February 8, 2024

The design of the medal is an important part of the aesthetic of each Games. Since 2004, the reverse of all medals has featured the Greek goddess Nike flying towards the historic Panathinaikos Stadium in Athens, the site of the original Olympic Games in ancient times.

The Paris organisers secured the approval of the International Olympic Committee. This allowed them to slightly modify the design to include the Eiffel Tower in the scene. The Eiffel Tower will also be there. All of the metal used to make the medals in Paris, which weigh about half a kilo each, has been recycled.

At the last Olympics in Tokyo, the Japanese organisers also used recycled metal, with each medal cast from alloys extracted from used consumer electronics such as mobile phones and laptops.

Although designed by Chaumet, the medals are manufactured by the National Mint, which has strongly denied a recent report that it had difficulty finding a non-toxic agent to coat each medal. In particular, the cast iron used in the construction of the Eiffel Tower must be protected from air and humidity to prevent it from oxidising. “We haven’t had any problems with this,” Joachim Roncin, design director of the Paris Games, told journalists.

Chaumet is one of more than 70 leading luxury brands owned by the French conglomerate LVMH, which is a major corporate sponsor and whose clients include the tower’s designer, Gustave Eiffel, and his family. Headquartered in Paris’s exclusive Place Vendome, the company’s work typically involves one-off commissions from royalty and billionaires.

It creates high-end, diamond-encrusted jewellery for weddings and high society parties. “We knew that everyone would be watching the event and we knew we couldn’t afford to fail,” said Benoit Verhulle, head of Chaumet’s jewellery workshop.

“We decided to treat the piece of the Eiffel Tower like a precious stone. We set it. We used our expertise as a jewellery house,” he added. Other LVMH brands such as Berluti, Dior and Louis Vuitton will also be present at the Paris Olympics as part of the company’s sponsorship deal.

The Eiffel Tower will play a central role during the Olympic Games, which run from 26 July to 11 August, and the Paralympics, from 28 August to 8 September. The opening ceremony will see sports teams sail down the Seine and disembark in front of the landmark. There is also speculation that the Olympic flame will be placed on the tower for the duration of the Games. By Marcos Menocal Pareja