When Gustave Eiffel’s company built Paris’ most recognizable monument for
the 1889 World’s Fair, many regarded the massive iron structure with
skepticism. Today, the Eiffel Tower, which continues to serve an important
role in television and radio broadcasts, is considered an architectural
wonder and attracts more visitors than any other paid tourist attraction in
the world.
Designing and Building the Eiffel Tower
In 1889, Paris hosted an Exposition Universelle (World’s Fair) to mark the
100-year anniversary of the French Revolution. More than 100 artists
submitted competing plans for a monument to be built on the Champ-de-Mars,
located in central Paris, and serve as the exposition’s entrance. The
commission was granted to Eiffel et Compagnie, a consulting and
construction firm owned by the acclaimed bridge builder, architect and
metals expert Alexandre-Gustave Eiffel. While Eiffel himself often receives
full credit for the monument that bears his name, it was one of his
employees—a structural engineer named Maurice Koechlin—who came up with and
fine-tuned the concept. Several years earlier, the pair had collaborated on
the Statue of Liberty’s metal armature.
Did you know? The base pillars of the Eiffel Tower are oriented with the
four points of the compass.
Eiffel reportedly rejected Koechlin’s original plan for the tower,
instructing him to add more ornate flourishes. The final design called for
more than 18,000 pieces of puddle iron, a type of wrought iron used in
construction, and 2.5 million rivets. Several hundred workers spent two
years assembling the framework of the iconic lattice tower, which at its
inauguration in March 1889 stood nearly 1,000 feet high and was the tallest
structure in the world—a distinction it held until the completion of New
York City’s Chrysler Building in 1930. (In 1957, an antenna was added that
increased the structure’s height by 65 feet, making it taller than the
Chrysler Building but not the Empire State Building, which had surpassed
its neighbor in 1931.) Initially, only the Eiffel Tower’s second-floor
platform was open to the public; later, all three levels, two of which now
feature restaurants, would be reachable by stairway or one of eight
elevators.
Millions of visitors during and after the World’s Fair marveled at Paris’
newly erected architectural wonder. Not all of the city’s inhabitants were
as enthusiastic, however: Many Parisians either feared it was structurally
unsound or considered it an eyesore. The novelist Guy de Maupassant, for
example, allegedly hated the tower so much that he often ate lunch in the
restaurant at its base, the only vantage point from which he could
completely avoid glimpsing its looming silhouette.
The Eiffel Tower Becomes a Permanent Feature of the Paris Skyline
Originally intended as a temporary exhibit, the Eiffel Tower was almost
torn down and scrapped in 1909. City officials opted to save it after
recognizing its value as a radiotelegraph station. Several years later,
during World War I, the Eiffel Tower intercepted enemy radio
communications, relayed zeppelin alerts and was used to dispatch emergency
troop reinforcements. It escaped destruction a second time during World War
II: Hitler initially ordered the demolition of the city’s most cherished
symbol, but the command was never carried out. Also during the German
occupation of Paris, French resistance fighters famously cut the Eiffel
Tower’s elevator cables so that the Nazis had to climb the stairs.
Over the years, the Eiffel Tower has been the site of numerous high-profile
stunts, ceremonial events and even scientific experiments. In 1911, for
instance, the German physicist Theodor Wulf used an electrometer to detect
higher levels of radiation at its top than at its base, observing the
effects of what are now called cosmic rays. The Eiffel Tower has also
inspired more than 30 replicas and similar structures in various cities
around the world.
Now one of the most recognizable structures on the planet, the Eiffel Tower
underwent a major facelift in 1986 and is repainted every seven years. It
welcomes more visitors than any other paid monument in the world—an
estimated 7 million people per year. Some 500 employees are responsible for
its daily operations, working in its restaurants, manning its elevators,
ensuring its security and directing the eager crowds flocking the tower’s
platforms to enjoy panoramic views of the City of Lights.
Author
History.com Editors
Publisher
A&E Television Networks