Palais Garnier, Paris — Przewodnik dla zwiedzających i co robić w okolicy

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O Palais Garnier

The Palais Garnier is one of the most opulent buildings in Paris and the setting that inspired Gaston Leroux's "The Phantom of the Opera." It opened on January 5, 1875, and remains one of the world's most celebrated opera houses.

The building was designed by 35-year-old architect Charles Garnier, who won a competition in 1860 from among 171 entries. When Empress Eugenie asked him what style the building was in, he reportedly replied, "It's in the Napoleon III style, Madame." Construction took 14 years, delayed by the Franco-Prussian War, the Paris Commune, and the discovery of an underground lake beneath the building site.

That underground lake is real, and it inspired the subterranean lake in Leroux's 1910 novel. The building actually sits above a water reservoir that the Paris fire brigade still uses as a water reserve.

The Grand Staircase, made of white Carrara marble with a polychrome marble balustrade, is one of the most photographed interiors in Paris. The auditorium ceiling was repainted by Marc Chagall in 1964, a controversial decision that replaced the original 1869 work.

The Palais Garnier seats 1,979 and continues to host opera, ballet, and orchestral performances. Self-guided visits are available when no rehearsals are scheduled.

If you're on a Questo quest through Paris, the Palais Garnier is a stop where real architecture inspired fiction, and where a phantom might still be lurking beneath the Grand Staircase.

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Adres
Pl. de l'Opéra, 75009 Paris, France

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Często Zadawane Pytania

Can you visit the Palais Garnier without seeing a show?
Yes, self-guided visits are available when no rehearsals are scheduled, typically 10am to 5pm. Admission is about 15 euros. You can see the Grand Staircase, the auditorium (from the balcony), the Grand Foyer, and a museum. The Chagall ceiling (1964) is visible from the auditorium.
Is the Phantom of the Opera underground lake real?
Yes, there is a real underground water reservoir beneath the Palais Garnier. It was created during construction when engineers couldn't fully drain the marshy ground. The Paris fire brigade still uses it as a water reserve. This reservoir inspired the subterranean lake in Gaston Leroux's 1910 novel 'The Phantom of the Opera.'

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