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MORE THAN 11 MILLION TOURISTS FLOCKED TO MAJOR MONUMENTS, MARKING A 15% YEAR-ON-YEAR RISE BUT THE GAMES ARE THOUGHT HAVE ATTRACTED A DIFFERENT TYPE OF VISITOR France's major heritage
sites saw a record-breaking year in 2023 measuring a 15% increase on 2022 - the previous record year. However, early reports suggest that the Paris Olympics has seen visits to heritage sites
decline despite a strong rise in visitor numbers. PARIS TAXI DRIVERS DEMAND PAYOUT FOR DISRUPTION DURING OLYMPICS Year-on-year visits to the French capital are up 20% due to the Paris
Olympics, according data from to Les Echos, however figures for the rest of the country were already healthy before the Games. The figures for the visits to French monuments, released by the
Centre des monuments nationaux (CMN) earlier this year, show that the organisation was on “a very good trajectory,” its president Marie Lavandier told media. THE TOP FIVE MONUMENTS The five
most popular monuments included three Parisian sites: With 1.75 million visitors, the Arc de Triomphe was the most-visited monument of the year, with a 7% increase in attendance compared to
2022. The Abbey of Mont Saint-Michel, in Normandy, came in second with 1.52 million visitors – a 23% increase on the previous year. Read more: Fee to visit Mont-Saint-Michel rejected for
other ways to ease crowds Sainte-Chapelle, located on the Ile de la Cité in the capital's 1st arrondissement, rounded out the top three with 1.36 million visitors, followed by the
Pantheon (980,000) and the Château et remparts de la cité de Carcassonne (594,990). The CMN pointed out that 18 of its monuments receive more than 100,000 visitors a year, compared with 16
in 2022, and two-thirds of the 110 listed monuments have seen an increase in visitor numbers. LESSER-KNOWN MONUMENTS For some lesser-known monuments, such as the Château de
Fougères-sur-Bièvre (Loir-et-Cher), this has been dramatic – an increase of 95% to reach 30,726 visitors. Le Corbusier's Villa Savoye in Poissy (Yvelines) saw a 58% increase, and the
Château de La Motte-Tilly (Aube) a 56% hike. Surprisingly, the Eiffel Tower is not, officially, a ‘national monument’. It is owned by the City of Paris, which has entrusted its management to
a development company called Société d’Exploitation de la Tour Eiffel. Read more: France overtourism: five alternatives to the most popular destinations WAS THE OLYMPIC EFFECT POSITIVE? One
of the more counterintuitive effects of the Paris Olympics is that visitor numbers soared by 20% but visits to monuments declined. Workers at the Louvre museum told Le Monde on August 5
that visitor numbers were actually down by between 20% and 30%, although management would only admit to a "slight drop". Similarly, the Musée d'Orsay has registered a 29% drop
in numbers and the Musée de l'Orangerie, 31%. Visitors to Disneyland Paris have reported a surprising lack of queues. Nonetheless, Olympic planners are hoping that the Games'
success will be measured long-term, as laid out in their 300-page report on the potential legacy of the Paris Games. The report for the International Olympic Committee, which studied all of
the venues used in the Games' 125-year history, found that of the 817 permanent venues that have been used for the Olympics, some 85 % are still in use, a proportion that rises to 92%
for the 206 permanent venues used in the 21st-Century. Relatively few new venues were commissioned for the Paris Olympics, and it is the hope of the the organising committee that the
city's monuments themselves will be imbued with memories of the "spectacular visuals and strong local character" of the Games to boost visitor numbers for years to come