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Eiffel Tower's new glass floor unveiled in Paris ceremony as part of £24m facelift

The refit of the half-hectare first floor, which began in May 2012, also includes shops, restaurants and a museum

Roisin O'Connor
Tuesday 07 October 2014 06:50 EDT
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Visitor Ewa Jarlinska, 32 from Poland, performs a headstand, on the new glass floor at The Eiffel Tower
Visitor Ewa Jarlinska, 32 from Poland, performs a headstand, on the new glass floor at The Eiffel Tower (Francois Mori/AP)

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Thrill-seeking Francophiles have a new way to get their selfie kicks: by striking a pose on the new glass floor of the Eiffel Tower.

The new installation is part of a £24 million refit that includes new solar panels and a museum. Nerves of steel will be required to walk on the transparent floor – built on the first level of the tower – where visitors can admire the 57 metre drop before heading up to the highest viewing platform, 276 metres above the ground.

The refit of the half-hectare first floor, which began in May 2012, also includes shops, restaurants and a museum explaining the 125-year-old construction.

A visitor poses for a photo on the new glass floor
A visitor poses for a photo on the new glass floor (AP Photo/Francois Mori)

The tower’s eco-friendliness has also been improved, with the installation of four solar panels to provide half of the tower’s hot water requirements. The four small viewing sections, which cost 30 million euro ($38 million), were unveiled to visitors on Monday.

“We wanted people to realise how the building is anchored with its four pillars in the ground”, Alain Moatti, the architect in charge of the renovation, told the Journal du Dimanche, the French Sunday newspaper.

The Eiffel tower opened in 1889 and was named after civil engineer and architect Gustave Eiffel. At 324m in height, it was the world’s tallest building for 41 years, until the Chrysler building was built in New York in 1930.

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