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PARIS

Paris Olympics: 600,000 opening ceremony spectators and €24 tickets

An opening ceremony with 600,000 spectators and event tickets on sale for €24 are just two of the ways that the organising committee hope that the 2024 Paris Olympics will be the most open and inclusive ever.

Paris Olympics: 600,000 opening ceremony spectators and €24 tickets
An artist's impression of the Paris 2024 opening ceremony. Image: Paris Olympic Committee

Tony Estanguet, president of the Paris Olympic Committee, has revealed more details of the 2024 event, which organisers want to be open to as many people as possible and celebrate the culture and beauty of Paris, as well as celebrating sport.

Speaking in a briefing organised by the Anglo-American Press Association of Paris, Estanguet said: “We want to bring the sports out of the stadiums and into the city to include the iconic landmarks of Paris.

“So we are working with museums and other venues to organise competitions at landmark sites – for example fencing will be in the Grand Palais, archery and para archery at Les Invalides, volleyball and blind football at the Eiffel Tower.”

MAP Here is where events will be held at Paris Olympics

The opening ceremony will also be open to as many people as possible – with space for at least 600,000 spectators.

Rather than holding it in the Olympic stadium as is traditional, in Paris the opening ceremony will be along the Seine, allowing organisers to showcase some of Paris’ most famous landmarks and also providing space for 600,000 spectators in stands along the banks of the river.

The spectacle will include 160 boats, moving 6km from the Pont d’Austerlitz to the Pont d’Iéna – passing the Eiffel Tower, Notre-Dame (which will, if all goes according to plan, be fully restored by 2024) and the Louvre along the way, with events staged in key locations along the route.

An artist’s impression of the Paris 2024 opening ceremony, which will include events staged in landmarks such as the Trocadero. Image: Paris Olympic Committee

Eighty big screens and speakers will relay the events live to spectators in Paris.

The ceremony will be held on July 26th, 2024.

Organisers have also pledged to include as many affordable tickets as possible, with €24 tickets available for all Olympic events and a total of 1 million €24 tickets. Half of all tickets sold will cost less than €50.

For the Paralympics, tickets will be on sale from €15 and half of all tickets on sale will cost €25 or less.

Estanguet said: “We know that of course that this price is not affordable to everyone but if you compare it to other sporting events or going to a concert we think this is a good price.”

The marathon event will also be open to non-elite athletes, in another Olympic first.

Tickets for the Olympics will go on sale in February 2023, and the Paralympic tickets will go on sale in Autumn 2023. the registration process for games volunteers will open at the beginning of 2023. 

Although the games are mostly being held in Paris, there are multiple events held outside the capital – including surfing which will be held in the French overseas territory of Tahiti, roughly 15,000km from Paris.

Equestrian events will be held outside Paris at the Palace of Versailles, while sailing be held in Marseille and handball in Lille. Meanwhile the football tournaments will be spread around 6 cities – Marseille, Nice, Lyon, Saint-Etienne, Bordeaux and Nantes.

Referring to the famous Paris-Saint-Germain v Olympique Marseille football rivalry, Estanguet remarked: “In a sporting sense it’s more usual to see competition between Paris and Marseille, but they are working together for the Games.”

There is also a programme known as Terre de jeux, in which towns can partner with the Games for Olympics-related events and the Olympic committee have created a sports programme for schools that involves 30 minutes of activity per day for primary schools – the intended legacy of the Games is not around physical infrastructure but in getting the nation moving and taking part in sports.

Keep in touch with all the latest news on the Games in our Paris 2024 section.

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PARIS

Paris takes down ads for ‘transphobic’ book

Posters promoting a book described as "transphobic" have been taken down in Paris after a top city official said the work amounted to hate speech.

Paris takes down ads for 'transphobic' book

The controversy comes as Paris prepares to host the Olympics from July 26 to August 11.

French advertising firm JCDecaux late Wednesday told AFP the posters had been removed, and apologised to people who could have been hurt by them.

The poster promoted a book titled “Transmania” that describes itself as “an investigation into the extremes of transgender ideology” and the “harmful political project” behind it.

Kam Hugh, a drag queen who has appeared on French television, first alerted the mayor’s office to the existence of the “openly transphobic” poster on X, formerly Twitter, on Tuesday night.

The account of the capital’s Socialist mayor Anne Hidalgo responded, asking about the poster’s location.

In a letter to JCDecaux seen by AFP, first deputy mayor Emmanuel Gregoire asked the advertising firm to remove the series.

“Transphobia is an offence. Hate has no place in our city,” he wrote on X.

Dora Moutot, one of the book’s authors, said the book was not transphobic and denounced “censorship based on assumptions rather than an analysis of the contents” of the book.

She said she and co-author Marguerite Stern had interviewed trans people for it.

“It is a sourced investigation into puberty blockers and certain actors who push for gender transitions and make a profit from it,” she wrote on X.

She slammed what she called a “regression of public discourse and debate”, but thanked Hugh for the free advertising.

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