Men at work painting the The Eiffel Tower in 1932

16 comments
  1. [Context](https://www.europeana.eu/en/blog/painting-the-eiffel-tower)

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    Everywhere needs a bit of a spruce up now and then. At home, that means getting the vacuum out or going outside with a tin of paint and a ladder.

    Imagine the task though, if the building you’re trying to give a face-lift is the Eiffel Tower in Paris.

    The pictures below are all from the National Library of France. They show men at work painting the Tower in 1910, 1924 and 1932. The first image, from 1924, seems like a European equivalent to that iconic black and white photograph of New York workmen taking a rest on the girder of an emerging skyscraper.

    Some Eiffel Tower facts:

    It took just over two years to build and was opened on 31 March 1889 as part of the Paris World Fair. It is named after Gustave Eiffel, whose company designed and built the Tower.

    More than 7 million people climb the Tower every year.

    It is 324 metres tall and if you choose to, you climb the 600 or so steps to its second floor, then take a lift to the top.

    Not everyone loved the design of the Eiffel Tower, thinking it useless and monstrous. Guy de Maupassant is said to have dined in the Tower’s restaurant every day as it was the one place from which you couldn’t see the Tower itself!

    The Tower is made of over 18,000 individual parts, joined by 2.5 million rivets – that would take a lot of painting!

    The Tower was supposed to be a temporary fixture on the Paris horizon – it was due to come down in 1909 but was allowed to remain.

    Radio transmitters were fitted to the Tower at the start of the First World War, making a significant contribution to the French war effort by jamming German radio communications.

  2. Casually working with the threat of plummeting to your death; people back then sure had big balls

  3. Thing is rope is prety inexpensive and it would have been pretty easy to be tied up so that you wouldn’t fall to your death.

    Amazing that the norm was just nah, if we fall, we fall.

  4. I always wonder how staged photos like these are.

    We know the famous one of workers at lunch on a steel beam during the construction of the Empire State Building was:
    https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2019/09/01/one-most-iconic-photos-american-workers-is-not-what-it-seems/

    The fact that the only worker actually painting in this photo is on the inside of the lattice, i.e. the one position where falling might not result in a long fall and inevitable death, is a little suspicious. As is the fact that nobody is paying any attention to the camera or photographer.

    I think it plausible they posed without ropes, etc. for the photo; and then went back to actually taking some safety precautions when painting.

  5. The photo is very good, the composition is especially strong.

    Also, holy shit, they don’t have any safety.

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