


The decision that Paris should have a new opera house worthy of the capital of France-one that would be the consummation of all that had gone before, a monument of architecture, a focus of city planning, a splendid setting for sculpture and painting, a shrine of opera and ballet-had been taken as early as 1840, but it was not until Napoleon III and Baron Haussman had begun their wholesale building programme in the 1858 that any practical move was made. The ceiling of the hall, created by Marc Chagall in the year 1964, destroyed irreparably the original paint work and is the subject of a special contention. The opera holds 2,200 spectators and up to 450 performers at a time.

The communication parts of the building, including the staircases and promenade spaces are of very high quality. The interiors contain large amounts of gold and velvet. The opulent and ostentatious design corresponds to the era. The Paris opera dates back to the period of the Second Empire.
