[ad_1]
As the countdown to the Olympics passed the 50-day mark, Paris hoisted its rings on the Eiffel Tower overnight and showed them off on Friday morning.
Workers assembled the prefabricated steel rings and after dark on Thursday lifted the logo, weighing 30 tonnes and 29 metres long, into place between two legs of the tower just above its first level.
Pierre Engel, an engineer at ArcelorMittal, the steel company that manufactured the rings from recycled material, said tests and studies had been carried out for many months to ensure the success of the operation.
The rings, each nine metres in diameter, will be illuminated every night.
“It will be one of the images of the Games,” predicted Thierry Reboul, Director of Events and Ceremonies at the Paris Organising Committee for the Olympic Games.
Only two other buildings in Paris have the five rings attached to their facades.
Earlier in the week, the rings were also hoisted at the Paris La Defense Arena, in suburban Nanterre, where the Olympic and Paralympic swimming events will be held.
On the other side of Paris, the Georges-Vallerey pool, a training venue for these Games, has long displayed the rings because it hosted the swimming at the 1924 Games.
The Paris 2024 Summer Olympics will take place from July 26 to August 11, 2024.
PUNCH Online reports that the Olympic rings are one of the most iconic symbols in the world, representing the unity and diversity of the Olympic movement.
The design consists of five interlocking rings in five different colours: blue, yellow, black, green, and red.
These rings are set on a white background. The colours of the rings, including the white background, were chosen because at least one of these colours appears on the national flag of every country in the world.
The rings were designed by Pierre de Coubertin, the founder of the modern Olympic Games, in 1913. They symbolise the union of the five inhabited continents (Africa, the Americas, Asia, Europe, and Oceania) and the international athletes’ meeting at the Olympic Games.
They convey a message of global unity and the shared values of Olympism.
AFP
[ad_2]
Source link