QRA International website
Friday, July 17, 2009
Saturday, July 11, 2009
Eiffel Tower
View from the base of the Eiffel
Built in 1887 to 1889 as the entrance of the World Exposition, the Eiffel Tower has become the icon of France. Visited by a staggering 200 million people since it was built, each year sees an average of over 6 million visitors alone. Imagine the amount of tourism revenue generated,hotel rooms booked, croissants, baguettes,air fares,train rides,and lots and lots of wine drunk just due to Eiffel alone. The Eiffel Tower is an engineering marvel which was once the tallest structure in the world. Its height at the roof is 300 m (986 ft) and at the antennae top it is 324 m or 1063 feet. It was intended after the Expo to be used as a communications tower and after 1920, it was returned to the city of Paris.
From 1889 to 1930, it was the world's tallest building until the Chrysler Building in New York beat it when it was built, reaching a height of 319 m or 1047 feet.
View from the Champs de Mars
Designed and built by the engineer Gustave Eiffel, and his team, it took 300 workers almost 3 years to finish. Using puddled iron, it weighs 7300 tons of iron and its total weight including the non metallic base structure and foundation is only 10000 tons - very lightwieght. He was very careful in his design taking into consideration wind resistance and wind shear. On a hot day, it expands by 18 cm away from the heat of the Sun. Also, it sways about 6 - 7 cm daily due to wind force.
Underneath the Eiffel Tower
Gustave Eiffel's creation was met with alot of criticism with many calling it an 'eyesore'. However, his brilliance as a designer and an engineer saw his product stand the test of time and is today the one of the most recognisable structures in the world. He used a non-linear differential equation when designing the structure based on counter - balancing the wind pressure with the tension between the construction elements at the point. A most recent engineering study showed that in fact, there were 2 non-linear equations being applied to the tower, one for the base till the lower structure and one for the upper structure.
Sheer brilliance.
Paris June 18 - 21 2009 Pictures
The Louvre - World's Largest Museum
Leonardo da Vinci's controversial self-portrait, the Mona Lisa.
The Louvre in the 1st Arrondissement (district) in Paris is world famous and has been a museum since the early 1500s. Louis IV was known to have a large collection of artifacts and it built up from there. The entrance of the museum is dramatic with IM Pei's pyramids occupying centre stage and is its official entrance. Today, easily 15,000 visitors, 60 percent of whom are tourists visit the Louvre every day.The day we were there, it was no different, thousands upon thousands of tourists of every hue and destination with their handphone cameras,SLRs and digital cameras taking in the sights and sounds of the more than 6,000 exhibits.An awesome and indescribable experience.
Nike (winged victory) of Samothrace
The exhibits are located in 6 areas ranging from the Egyptian and Middle Eastern, Renaissance Masters,Greek, Roman and Far Eastern. We had spent a total of 3 hours at the Louvre and only managed to cover barely 10% of the whole museum,that is to give you the size of the whole museum. According to our tour guide, if one spent 1 minute at every exhibit, it would take a whole 9 months (!) before covering every exhibit of the muesum !!
Centaur, Half Man Half Horse and Cupid
All the works are kept in airconditioned rooms with humidity under control. This is to prevent the formation of moss and aging of the works prematurely.
Venus de Milo or Goddess of Love
There are many mythological Greek Gods, of which the Venus (Love) is the most popular. Set in marble, it is an awe inspring 6 feet tall and one can even see the toned definitions on her body. Even in those days, the concept of 'body beautiful' or scultped body was already in vogue.
Truly, if one is into the works of sculptors,painters and artists, this the THE museum to visit.
Thursday, July 9, 2009
Paris Day 3 - Drama at the Eiffel Tower
The lovely Eiffel taken just below the structure
On the 20th July,while my wife was shopping, I went to catch a glimpse of Paris' most famous landmark, the Eiffel Tower.
As I approached the tower from the Metro, there were many vendors of different origins, I imagine they must be immigrants from the past colonies. Algeria,Senegal,French Guinea and Vietnam spring to mind. The most prevalent were the African vendors probably from Senegal, selling all kinds of trinkets from small Eiffel keychains to silk scarves.
His countrymen are screaming but as more police and reinforcements come up,they back off.
At the foot of the Eiffel, I am reminded that this structure was once given to America as a gift between the French and American Governments and it is now back at its rightful place. Seeing the thousands of tourists there, I decided to take snaps of the Eiffel from various angles just for fun. At the base of the Eiffel, I milled with many photographers and tourists who were queueing to buy tickets to either take the elevators to the 1stbase, 2nd section or the top. There was the presence of armed soldiers - special operations weapons specialists who were patrolling the place to deter any suspected terrorists or any people causing trouble. Some were on foot and some were on bicycles, a smart thing given that there are masses of people in close proximity and a home made bomb or detonating device can cause massive collateral damage. So the need for heightened vigilance.
A second vendor is arrested while the first guy is still wrestled on the ground - all this in full view of about 2,000 tourists just standing metres away
Suddenly, without warning, I heard shouting and the soldiers made a beeline for someone, before I know it, 2 soldiiers wrestle a Senegalese vendor to the ground and pin him there. What I didn't expect next was that, in a flash, ALL the Senegal vendors started screaming and became very hostile swinging their goods and taunting the soldiers.There was a tense standoff and I, bouyed by my karate training and slight sense of bravado, started taking pictures barely 10 feet away of the standoff. All this in front of thousands of tourists and onlookers !
Verbal taunts and tense situation with army people with submachineguns
There a few pushes and staring going on and the vedors told some tourists to backoff. Police reinforcements started filtering in - seems like they were prepared for this kind of situation on a regular basis. The vendors got really angry and one guy who shoved the policeman got caught and was handcuffed.
Suddenly about 20 vendors start to faceoff with the army
The rest of them started to shout and curse and the police came in in droves. The Senegalses started to back away and made a hasty retrest,but you could see the killer stares. Calm was restored and the Eiffel looked as resplendent as ever in the morning Sun.
A Senegalese vendor is wresteld to the ground by 2 army personnel, he had stolen something
It was going to be a lovely day.More of that in a later blog.
Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Paris Day 2 - Shopping
Outside Rue St Honore, Chanel Store
It is many ladies dream all over the world to buy branded goods and the 'best of the best' places to shop in terms of quality, price (yes price unbelievably), service and for the latest fashion accessories, the chic women, the tai tais, the supermodels, the film stars (men and women) all flock to Paris. Make no mistake. This is the centre of high fashion. I followed my wife shopping and the experience is quite underwhelming, to be frank. I was half expecting people to be bowing at us (like in Tokyo) or salesgirls who run and are familiar with all the models of bags, shoes and purses. On the contrary, the service provided by some boutique shops was (according to my wife) substandard. Salesgirls were poor in their product knowledge, whether they had stock of that make of bag, or in the colours she requested. They were not arrogant, although one store (I won't name) was quite high handed in stating that they 'never' have a sale.
Louis Vuitton Store Display with the Summer Collection 2009
We visited Chanel, Balenciaga, Hermes, Givenchy and Ferragamo. On the whole the service was reasonably good although I had heard for 'high end shoppers' they would serve champagne but we were probably looking like middle class tourists just window shopping. There were several good 'buys' which compared to Singapore shops, the savings were as much as 30% even without the summer sales.
101 Ave de Champs Elysee - Home of Louis Vuitton Flagship store
One thing I noticed, the gay men in Paris dress very very fashionably. There was one very dashing looking fellow, he looked about 6 foor tall and had his tie undone,with a full suit and hair coiffered. Of course he had a 5 oclock shadow (unshaven chin) and I thought "wow, this guy is cool". He spoke very stylishly and as he showed my wife and I down the stairs to the basement for more items, he 'galeked' or walked very daintily with his limp wrist sticking out like carrying a tray ! I was quite speechless. There are some handbags which the gay men like to carry and Chanel and Hermes caters to their gay clientele.
Typical Parisian Street
Many tourists make a beeline for LV as it is most distinctive but spare a thaought for the more humble Department Stores such as Printemps and Galeries Lafayette. I bought a pair of Tiger (former name of ASICS) for EUR 95 (S$ 200) and Zegna shirt for EUR 160 (S$ 320). Not cheap and there is a tourist VAT of 17.5% on top, which can be claimed at either the airport or at the store itself. The thing is, Paris shopping is tops for quality, variety and of course genuineness. No one will dream of an imitation whatever here. The truly discerning shopper can tell the difference in the clot, cutting,the design and colour and 'how well put together it is'. No pasar malam clothes shopping here.
The shopping never ends and the dreams of many women the world over are satisfied in Paris.
Paris Day 2 - Jardin (Garden) du Tuileries
I bought an oil painting of the Arc de Triumph from Mr. Akhbas, a Turk
After a full nights rest, we decided to check out the shops at the Champs Elysee as well as George V and Rue de Royal. All these are the dreams of many women, because the latest, fashion clothes, apparel like handbags, shoes and scarves are all in Paris. My wife had checked out all the locations of the shops 2 weeks in advance and also the Metro (subway) lines to get to
them. The list of the 'A' list shops are Balenciaga, Chanel (2 shops), Hermes (2 shops), Louis Vuitton, Prada. More of these in a later blog.
Lazing by the fountain in the Gardens - the weather is a perfect 21 deg C and sunny with occasional clouds
In the afternoon, we went to the Jardin du Tuileries which is the main garden within Paris. It covers about 5 football fields in length and is framed by the Concorde on one end and the Louvre Museum on the other.Everyday, when the whether permits, literally ten thousand or more tourists from all over the world descend and wlak through its gardens. I must warn that Paris is a place where they love their dogs and don't eat them (!), so care must be taken not to walk over the dog droppings.
I am glad to say that on 2 consecutive mornings,I ran 5 km and 8 km respectively in the Touleries Gardens and was surprised to see Singaporean (a lady with my Army half-marathon T shirt) and another Caucasian chap with the Merlion T -shirt runners among them. Truly, Singaporeans are very well travelled even though we may only have 4.5 million population.
This waiter, Pierre, wanted to be in the picture so... 3 in the photo !
During the walk in the Gardens, we had a cup of coffee in the same cafe my wife and I had 16 years ago when we were newly weds, so this is a second honeymoon of sorts ! My thinking has matured when I was last here and my expectations of myself as well as the places I visit are now more exacting so the conclusion I came to after just 2 - 3 days staying here is this
as shown below. We also lazed by the fountains which resembled a huge swimming pool but the weather was a perfect 21 deg C so much so that many people were lazing around because it was so pleasant. I cannot say the same for any place in South East Asia.
Having a coffee in the afternoon in summer,in the Gardens of Tuileries
Parisians in general are well groomed and stylish and the French language is very smooth sounding to the foreign ear. On top of that, with almost 1500 years of history and culture in the past, they have many great achievements and are proud of those achievements. However, as a modern city, it is quite backward in the sense that the infrastructure like the airports,the Metro, the buses and even the traffic systems are all 3rd world so much so that many newly industrialised countries like Singapore,Malaysia,Taiwan,South Korea have newer, far efficient (and less dirty and grafitti filled) infrasrtucture,people movers and and make a greater impression so much so that I believe that this Millenium truly belongs to Asia.
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