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The World’s Most Visited Museum Just Hit Pause—Here’s Why


Updated: June 19, 2025 07:09

Image Source: NDTV

In a shocking and historic move, Paris' iconic Louvre Museum was closed on June 16 when employees held an unscheduled strike in reaction to what they termed unbearable working conditions fueled by mass tourism. Thousands of tourists were left stranded at the glass pyramid, mirroring a building crisis within global heritage tourism.

Crisis Trigger

The walkout began during a routine internal meeting and snowballed into a full-scale strike by security, ticketing, and gallery personnel.

Staff cited overcrowding, systematic understaffing, and crumbling infrastructure as reasons for the protest.

The museum, constructed for hundreds of thousands fewer visitors, now hosts more than 8.7 million visitors annually—many packing into the Salle des États to view the Mona Lisa.

Operational Fallout

Tourists were left in long, stationary lines without advance notice or explanation.

The museum will half-open with limited viewing of big pieces like the Mona Lisa and Venus de Milo, while complete reopening is only expected by Wednesday.

Structural Strain

Employees have called the museum a physical hell, and reasons cited include temperature changes, leaks, and inadequate facilities.

A €700–800 million renovation unveiled by President Macron includes a new entrance and Mona Lisa gallery, but employees say they can't wait six years for things to get better.

Broader Context

The strike follows on from anti-tourism protests across Europe, from Venice to Barcelona, as locals and workers push back against uncontrolled tourist numbers.

Sources: France24, Business Standard, Moneycontrol, MSN News, Associated Press, ABC News, CBC, The Economic Times.

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