The Monte-Carlo Opera by Charles Garnier, an exuberant concert hall built in record time

Select Language

English

Down Icon

Select Country

France

Down Icon

The Monte-Carlo Opera by Charles Garnier, an exuberant concert hall built in record time

The Monte-Carlo Opera by Charles Garnier, an exuberant concert hall built in record time

Published on
Article reserved for our subscribers.
The seaside facade of the casino and the Opera House designed by architect Charles Garnier. RIEGER Bertrand / Société des Bains de Mer de Monaco/hemis.fr
To mark the bicentenary of the architect's birth and the 150th anniversary of the inauguration of the Paris Opera, La Croix explores his work along the Mediterranean coast. A second stop is Monaco, where Charles Garnier built a concert hall in record time, a miniature replica of the Paris Opera. (2/3)

It took Charles Garnier nearly fifteen years to complete the construction of the Paris Opera, begun under the Second Empire and completed under the Third Republic. For the Monte-Carlo Opera in Monaco, things would go much faster. In 1878, Marie Blanc, propelled to the head of the Casino after the death of her husband, François, a year earlier, gave the architect barely six months to build a proper concert hall to replace the small ballroom. Until then, the orchestra had performed on a wooden platform to entertain players between card games.

This article is reserved for subscribers
La Croıx

La Croıx

Similar News

All News
Animated ArrowAnimated ArrowAnimated Arrow