Staff far outnumbered visitors to the elegant Chenonceau castle in
France's Loire Valley as it reopened on Saturday with meticulously
prepared safeguards against the coronavirus.
The Renaissance jewel, which in a normal year attracts upwards of a
million visitors, could not justify reopening on financial grounds until
Parisians are again allowed to travel beyond a 100-kilometre (60 mile)
radius from home, communications director Caroline Darrasse told AFP.
But reopening a few days early -- the relaxation takes effect on
Tuesday -- gave the site a chance to test the precautions the staff have
put in place, Darrasse noted.
A strict one-way route has been marked out inside the castle, and parts
that risk crowding were either cordoned off or restricted to small
numbers at a time -- such as the impressive kitchens on the lower level.
"It's her first chateau," grinned Lucile Daron Van Gennep, 32, whose eight-month-old daughter was strapped to her front.
She and her 35-year-old husband Coenraad had the castle's gallery
spanning the Cher river -- where Catherine de Medicis once threw
sumptuous balls -- all to themselves.
"It's a nice surprise," Lucile said, speaking from behind her
obligatory face mask. The couple live in Saumur, just within the 100-km
limit.
Many smaller sites such as the Chateau d'Usse, famous as the purported
backdrop of the Sleeping Beauty fable, reopened at the very start of
France's deconfinement on May 11.
In the Renaissance town of Amboise, the Clos Luce, where Leonardo da
Vinci spent the last three years of his life -- the 500th anniversary of
his death was last year -- reopened on May 20.
'Intelligently done'
"We did all we could to reassure people" of the safety of visiting the
imposing manor in the heights of the town, director Francois Saint Bris
told AFP on Friday. "It's intelligently done."
The lockdown cost the site around one million euros ($1.1 million) in
lost revenues per month, with outgoings totalling around 250,000 euros,
he said.
On Friday however, visitors to the site were few and far between.
Similarly, things were slow at another early bird, the royal fortress
of Chinon, where the 17-year-old Joan of Arc had a pivotal meeting with
Charles VII in 1429.
Marie-Eve Scheffer, the curator of the fortress, said the four-day
Ascension weekend, normally the busiest of the year, drew some 450
visitors, compared with a normal flow of around 3,800.
"We expect a bigger return next weekend," Scheffer told AFP by telephone.
Historian Stephane Bern, who spearheaded a regional pressure campaign
to persuade French President Emmanuel Macron to allow the chateaus to
start welcoming visitors again, urged patience.
"It will take off again," he told AFP. "It's a matter of priming the pump, kickstarting the machine."
Bern, a champion of France's cultural and historical heritage who is a
frequent radio host and television presenter, noted that as long as the
sites cannot reopen their eateries and gift shops, visiting them is
"less attractive".
The doyen of the region that was once the playground of French kings --
the sprawling Chambord castle -- will not reopen until next Friday.
Tourism accounts for 15 percent of the Loire Valley region's economy,
compared with nine percent nationally. The sector normally brings in
some 2.9 billion euros annually.
The Loire Valley -- collectively a World Heritage site -- jostles with
Paris and Provence as a top French tourist destination, and is well
positioned to edge out the French capital as the country emerges from
lockdown.
At Chenonceau, one attraction has remained a constant throughout the
confinement: a bucolic picnic area along the castle's canal, where a
couple dozen visitors were enjoying lunch on Saturday.
https://www.thelocal.fr/20200531/timid-reopening-for-frances-loire-valley-chateaus