Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Grande Roue de Paris

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Address
  
75008 Paris, France

Opened
  
1900

Grande Roue de Paris

Hours
  
Open today · 11AM–1AMSaturday11AM–1AMSunday11AM–12AMMonday11AM–12AMTuesday11AM–12AMWednesday11AM–12AMThursday11AM–12AMFriday11AM–1AM

Similar
  
Place de la Concorde, Luxor Obelisk, Tuileries Garden, The Grand Perfume Museum, Galerie nationale du Jeu de

La grande roue de paris


The Grande Roue de Paris was a 100-metre (328 ft) tall Ferris wheel built in 1900 for the Exposition Universelle world exhibition at Paris.

Contents

It was the tallest wheel in the world at the time of its opening. The passenger cars were so large that they were removed from the wheel and used as homes for French families when the region was devastated by World War I.

Théodore Vienne, the industrialist and founder of the Paris–Roubaix cycle race, was both owner and director of the Grande Roue de Paris.

It was disassembled in 1920 and rag-and-bone merchants used the pods as huts to carry on their trade. This evolved, through second-hand shops, into the antique trade that is now to be found on the site and known as the Swiss Village. The remains of the wheel were finally sent for scrap in 1937. Almost 90 years passed between its construction and a taller wheel, the 107.5-metre (353 ft) Cosmo Clock 21, being built in Japan.

La grande roue de paris


References

Grande Roue de Paris Wikipedia


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