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UK visitors will have to pay more to see the Mona Lisa in the Louvre in Paris than EU tourists as part of major renovation, Emmanuel Macron says
A multi-year overhaul will see a new entrance built as well as a
separate underground gallery for Leonardo da Vinci's masterpiece in what
Mr Macron called a "new renaissance".
Visitors from the UK will have to pay more to visit the Louvre in
Paris than EU citizens as part of plans for a major renovation of the
world's most popular museum.
French President Emmanuel Macron said
visitors from outside the EU will have to pay more than those from
within the bloc as part of a major overhaul of the landmark which will
include moving the Mona Lisa to a new underground room of its own.
Speaking in front of Leonardo da Vinci's masterpiece on Tuesday, Mr
Macron said it will have a "special space" within the Louvre as part of
what he called "a new renaissance".
The Mona Lisa is currently kept behind protective glass in the
museum's largest room, which is often filled with long, noisy queues of
visitors hoping for a selfie with the early 16th-century classic.
Mr
Macron did not disclose the likely cost of the project, but it is
thought hundreds of millions of euros will be needed to modernise the
site, which suffers from overcrowding and outdated facilities.
A spokesperson for the president, quoted by euronews, said taxpayers will foot a "very small part" of the bill.
The
Pompidou Centre, another major museum in Paris, is closing at the end
of this year for a five-year renovation worth 262m euros (£219m).
The underground rooms, one of which will house the famous Renaissance
painting, and a new entrance near the River Seine, scheduled to open in
2031, are part of the scheme, the first overhaul of the Louvre since the
1980s
That upgrade, completed in 1989, added the iconic glass pyramid
entrance and was designed to cope with four million visitors a year.
In 2024, 8.7m people came, more than three-quarters of them
foreigners mostly from the US, China, Italy, the UK, Germany and Spain.
The museum is no longer up to international standards and earlier this
month Louvre director Laurence des Cars warned it is in danger of
becoming obsolete.
In a document published by Le Parisien, Ms Des Cars told France's
Culture Minister Rachida Dati that the Louvre had suffered gradual
degradation caused by water leaks, temperature fluctuations, and other
issues, which was "endangering the preservation of artworks".
It is not properly insulated from the cold and the heat tends to
amplify noise, making the site uncomfortable for both the public and the
staff, and its food and restroom facilities also aren't up to scratch,
she said.
Half of the Louvre's budget comes from the state,
including the salaries of the 2,200 employees, and the other half is
provided by private funds including ticket sales, earnings from
restaurants, shops and bookings for special events.
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