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Section of Eiffel Tower staircase fetches over €450,000 at auction
Section of Eiffel Tower staircase fetches over €450,000 at auction
Lifestyle
Section of Eiffel Tower staircase fetches over €450,000 at auction
by DZRH News22 May 2026
FILE PHOTO: A portion of the original staircase of the Eiffel Tower built by Gustave Eiffel in 1889 is displayed during a press preview ahead of its upcoming auction organized by Artcurial in Paris, France, May 13, 2026. REUTERS/Alice Sacco/File Phot

PARIS, May 21 (Reuters) - A spiral segment of the Eiffel Tower's original staircase sold for more than €450,000 at auction in Paris on Thursday.

The buyer, who was in the auction room, became the owner of a 14-step section of staircase that stands 9 feet tall, weighs 1.4 tons and dates back to 1889, the year the monument that towers over central Paris was completed.

"When you buy a piece of the Eiffel Tower, you’re buying a piece of Paris, along with all the imagination and symbolism it represents," said Sabrina Dolla, Art Deco design director at Artcurial Paris auction house where the sale took place.

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More than four decades ago, a total of 526 feet of staircase were cut into smaller sections and sold, replaced by elevators which now carry visitors to the Eiffel Tower's highest viewing platform.

The section auctioned on Thursday fetched €450,160 ($521,825.47), three times the upper range of its pre-sale estimated value of between €120,000 and €150,000.

In 2008 one section sold to a private American buyer for a record of €550,000. Other pieces of Eiffel Tower staircase, ranging from nine to 30 feet, are housed at prestigious venues around the globe.

Portions are preserved near the Statue of Liberty in New York, in the gardens of the Yoshi Foundation in Yamanashi, Japan, as well as in private foreign collections.

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Dolla said the Paris 2024 Olympics, which saw landmarks including the Eiffel Tower, Place de la Concorde and the Grand Palais take centre stage at the games, had boosted the tower's appeal among collectors.

"We’re definitely seeing a renewed interest in what it symbolizes and in its aesthetic appeal,” she added.

($1 = 0.8627 euros)

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(Reporting by Elissa Darwish; Editing by Richard Lough)

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