An Olympic medal inlaid with a piece of the Eiffel Tower. How’s that for a monumental prize? A hexagonal, polished chunk of iron taken from the iconic landmark is being embedded in each gold, silver and bronze medal that will be hung around athletes’ necks at the July 26-Aug. 11 Paris Games and Paralympics that follow
Quick Read
- Innovative Medal Design: The Paris Games introduce medals with embedded pieces of the Eiffel Tower, offering athletes a unique and historical memento from France.
- Eiffel Tower’s Role: The iconic landmark contributes iron parts, historically replaced during renovations, to the creation of the Olympic and Paralympic medals.
- Medal Preparation: The Eiffel Tower chunks were meticulously prepared by stripping paint, polishing, and varnishing, then stamped with “Paris 2024” and the Games logo.
- Symbolic Representation: The hexagonal shape of the iron pieces symbolizes France, often referred to as “L’Hexagone” due to its geographical shape.
- Design and Materials: Parisian jeweler Chaumet designed the medals, incorporating recycled metals and design elements that pay homage to the Eiffel Tower’s construction.
- Distinctive Features: These are the first Olympic medals to include parts of a famous monument, enhancing their uniqueness and historical significance.
- Medal Details: The gold, silver, and bronze medals feature different textures and designs, including representations of the ancient Greek goddess Nike and the Eiffel Tower.
- Accessibility Features: The Paralympic medals include Braille inscriptions and notches along the edges to distinguish between gold, silver, and bronze for visually impaired athletes.
- Production Numbers: The Paris Mint is producing over 5,000 medals for both the Olympics and Paralympics, with some reserved for potential future needs or museum displays.
- Medal Specifications: The medals vary in weight and composition, with gold medals being silver plated with gold, and bronzes made from a copper alloy, all presented in a Chaumet box with a certificate of authenticity.
The Associated Press has the story:
The Paris Olympics medals are made with pieces of the Eiffel Tower
Newslooks- PARIS (AP) —
An Olympic medal inlaid with a piece of the Eiffel Tower. How’s that for a monumental prize? A hexagonal, polished chunk of iron taken from the iconic landmark is being embedded in each gold, silver and bronze medal that will be hung around athletes’ necks at the July 26-Aug. 11 Paris Games and Paralympics that follow.
Games organizers revealed their revolutionary design on Thursday.
Simone Biles has seven medals from her two previous Olympics and LeBron James has two golds and one bronze from London, Beijing and Athens. But neither of those athletes who are targeting the Paris Games nor any of the roughly 36,600 other medalists at 29 previous Summer Olympics stretching back to 1896 ever owned one quite like these.
By making history at the Games, Paris medalists will take a bit of France and its history home, too.
Here’s a deep dive into the medals that are sure to wow:
ARE THESE REALLY EIFFEL TOWER CHUNKS?
Absolutely. The 330-meter (1,083-foot) tall tower is made of 18,038 iron parts. But it’s also getting a bit long in the tooth. Built for the 1889 World’s Fair — which celebrated the 100th anniversary of the French Revolution — engineer Gustave Eiffel’s tower was only intended to stand for 20 years.
Instead, it just goes on and on — thanks to a bit of rejuvenating surgery from time to time and constant care. The 135-year-old tower is a veteran of two previous Games — in 1900 and 1924, the last held in Paris.
The iron pieces embedded in the center of the Olympic medals each weigh 18 grams (about two-thirds of an ounce).
They were cut from girders and other bits that were swapped out of the Eiffel Tower during renovations and stored for safekeeping, according to Joachim Roncin, head of design at the Paris Games organizing committee.
“The concept came after a few discussions. We realized that there’s one symbol known across the world, which is the Eiffel Tower,” Roncin said. “We said to ourselves, ‘Hey, what if we approached the Eiffel Tower Operating Co. to see if it’s possible to get a bit of the Eiffel Tower to integrate into the medal?’”
The company agreed, and “the dream became reality,” he said. “It’s really a bit of metal from the Eiffel Tower.”
HOW WERE THE CHUNKS PREPARED?
They were stripped of paint, polished and varnished for their second life.
They are stamped with “Paris 2024” and the Games logo — which looks like a flame or the face of a woman with a chic bob haircut. The five Olympic rings are also stamped on the iron of the Olympic medals. The Paralympic logo of three swooshes, known as the Agitos, is stamped on the medals for the Aug. 28-Sept. 8 Paralympics.
The iron pieces’ hexagonal form represents France. The French sometimes refer to their country as “L’Hexagone” — the hexagon — because of its shape.
Paris jewelry house Chaumet designed the medals. Six small clasps that hold the iron pieces in the medals are a wink at the 2.5 million rivets that bind the Eiffel Tower together.
Around the iron pieces are disks of gold, silver or bronze. They’re crinkled to reflect the light, making the medals shine. Games organizers say the metal is all recycled, not newly mined.
ARE PARIS’ MEDALS UNIQUE?
Yes. Olympic medals have tended to be quite sober. In what was a first, medals for the 2008 Beijing Olympics contained inlaid jade disks. But Paris is the only host city to include chunks of a famous monument.
“Having a gold medal is already something incredible. But we wanted to add this French touch and we thought that the Eiffel Tower would be this cherry on the top,” Roncin said.
“Having a piece of it is a piece of history.”
The ancient Greek goddess of victory, Nike, features on the Olympic medals’ other side — as she has done at every Games since 1928. But Paris has also added a small representation of the Eiffel Tower on that side, in another break with tradition.
The other side of the Paralympic medals shows a view of the tower as if looking upward from underneath. For visually impaired people, “Paris 2024” is written in Braille and the edges have notches: one for gold, two for silver, three for bronze.
BY THE NUMBERS
The Paris Mint is manufacturing 5,084 medals — about 2,600 for the Olympics and 2,400 for the Paralympics. That is likely more than will be required. Some will be stored in case that medals need to reassigned after the Games, which can happen when medal-winners are subsequently stripped of the prizes for doping. Some go to museums. Any other spares could be destroyed.
The gold medals weigh 529 grams and are not pure gold. They are made of silver and plated with 6 grams of gold.
The silvers weigh 525 grams.
The bronzes weigh 455 grams and are a copper, tin and zinc alloy.
The medals are 85 millimeters across and 9.2 millimeters thick.
They’ll come in a dark-blue box from Chaumet and a certificate from the Eiffel Tower Operating Co. that the iron pieces came from the monument. Paris organizers didn’t give a monetary value for the medals.