Dead quiet: Paris Catacombs close for six months for renovations

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The Paris Catacombs will be modernised, with better ventilation, lighting and an improved layout.

The Paris Catacombs will be modernised, with better ventilation, lighting and an improved layout.

PHOTO: AFP

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  • Paris Catacombs, the resting place for millions, closes for six months from Nov 3 for €5.5 million renovations.
  • The renovations aim to improve ventilation, lighting and layout to improve visitor experience and preserve bones.
  • High humidity allows bacteria to grow on the bones, cementing them together due to past theft of bones (AFP).

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PARIS - One of Paris’ top tourist attractions – and certainly its most morbid – closes to visitors from Nov 3 for six months of renovations.

The Paris Catacombs, underground galleries that are the final resting place for millions of bodies disinterred from the capital’s cemeteries between the Middle Ages and the French Revolution, are to become modernised, with better ventilation, lighting and an improved layout.

The works, costing €5.5 million (S$8.2 million), are designed to improve the experience for the 600,000 annual visitors to the ossuary museum – and to help preserve the remains held there.

The moisture build-up in the catacombs, which drips into puddles on the ground and on visitors “is bad for the preservation of bones,” the site’s administrator, Ms Isabelle Knafou said, as she gave AFP a last look before the temporary closure.

That humidity allows the bacteria to settle and grow on the piled-up skeletal remains.

Renovations will aim to reduce that problem, while also restructuring the near 800m-long path visitors follow during visits, all the while aiming to keep the “authentic” spirit of the place, Ms Knafou said.

Graffiti that has been painted in some spots will be cleaned off, though Ms Knafou said that much of the writing found on the galleries’ walls was left by visitors in the 19th century and “almost” contributes to the place’s history.

She said that, because of the rampant theft of some of the femurs, tibias and skulls in the past, the bones were now cemented together.

She added that “some visitors – Americans, notably – come to scare themselves a little, without being aware that these are real human bones”.

“These are our ancestors, and we explain that no-one wants someone to fiddle or play with the skull of their grandmother.” AFP

The underground galleries are the final resting place for millions of bodies disinterred from Paris’ cemeteries between the Middle Ages and the French Revolution.

PHOTO: AFP

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