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Tony Estanguet, president of the Paris 2024 organising committee (right), alongside (from left) Arnaud Assoumani, Sara Balzer and Marie Patouillet
Tony Estanguet, president of the Paris 2024 organising committee (right), alongside (from left) Arnaud Assoumani, Sara Balzer and Marie Patouillet, with the medals. Photograph: Thibault Camus/AP
Tony Estanguet, president of the Paris 2024 organising committee (right), alongside (from left) Arnaud Assoumani, Sara Balzer and Marie Patouillet, with the medals. Photograph: Thibault Camus/AP

Paris Olympic and Paralympic medals will contain chunks of Eiffel Tower

  • Design for Paris 2024 medals unveiled by jeweller Chaumet
  • ‘The absolute symbol of Paris and France is the Eiffel Tower’

Podium finishers at the upcoming Paris Olympics will be rewarded with a piece of the Eiffel Tower, organisers said on Thursday, unveiling the event’s medals which are set with hexagon-shaped tokens forged out of scrap metal from the monument.

The idea was to link the Games with symbols of France, said Thierry Reboul, creative director of Paris 2024. “The absolute symbol of Paris and France is the Eiffel Tower,” Reboul told reporters. “It’s the opportunity for the athletes to bring back a piece of Paris with them.”

Designed by the jeweller Chaumet, the 18-gram hexagon tokens, representing the shape of France, are made of iron taken from the Tower during past refurbishments then stored for years in a warehouse whose location is secret. They sit in the centre of the gold, silver and bronze medals, ringed with grooves evoking light rays bursting outward – drawn from a tiara design in Chaumet’s archives.

A view of the front of the Olympic gold medal (left) and the reverse side of the Paralympic gold medal for Paris 2024. Photograph: Teresa Suárez/EPA

The back of the medals features the Greek goddess of victory, Nike, charging forward, with the Acropolis to one side and the Eiffel Tower to the other.

Paralympics medals feature a view of the Eiffel Tower from underneath, and are stamped with Paris 2024 in braille – a homage to the Frenchman who invented it. The 5,084 medals are produced by France’s mint, the Monnaie de Paris.

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“We want to make sure those pieces of Eiffel Tower stay at home,” the French wheelchair tennis player Pauline Déroulède told reporters. “Seeing them so close gives some extra motivation,” added another home nation athlete, the wrestler Koumba Larroque.

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