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ArtsFrance

France's Louvre museum to receive major overhaul

January 28, 2025

The world-famous Mona Lisa is set to be moved to a dedicated room inside the museum with its own entrance. Meanwhile, non-EU visitors can expect to pay higher entry fees in future.

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Emmanuel Macron standing in front of the Mona Lisa at the Louvre
Macron announced a 'grand new entrance' for the iconic art galleryImage: Bertrand Guay/dpa/AFP/picture alliance

French President Emmanuel Macron announced a major overhaul of the Louvre museum in Paris on Tuesday.

The renovated museum would include a "grand new entrance" near the River Seine and a dedicated room for the Mona Lisa, Macron said.

Meanwhile, visitors form outside of the European Union would pay a higher entry free.

The Louvre's latest big renovation in the 1980s was designed to receive 4 million annual visitors. But last year, the museum received 8.7 million visitors.

The Louvre in Paris, France
The Louvre underwent its last major renovation in the 1980sImage: ROBIN UTRECHT/picture alliance

Mona Lisa to get dedicated space

Standing in front of Leonardo da Vinci's masterpiece, Macron said the Mona Lisa would be moved to a new room inside the museum.

The space will be "independently accessible compared to the rest of the museum" and have "its own access pass," Macron said.

The painting is currently shown behind protective glass in the museum's largest room. The long queues of tourists eager to see the Mona Lisa mean that other paintings in the room often go unnoticed.

Last week, the Louvre's president Laurence des Cars last week warned that the centuries-old building was suffered water leaks, temperature swings and failing infrastructure, all of which posed threats to the museum's collection.

Environmental activists throw soup at 'Mona Lisa'

zc/wmr (AFP, AP, Reuters)