What's in the Secret Apartment Atop the Eiffel Tower? - podcast episode cover

What's in the Secret Apartment Atop the Eiffel Tower?

Dec 26, 20193 min
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Episode description

Yes, there's a secret apartment atop the Eiffel tower -- and it's filled with science! Learn how it came to be -- and how it actually saved the tower from destruction -- in this episode of BrainStuff.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to Brainstuff production of iHeart Radio, Hey brain Stuff Lauren Vogelbong here. The Eiffel Tower is one of the world's most famous selfie backdrops, but it's also home to a little known apartment with an intriguing history steeped in science and secrecy. The Eiffel Tower was unveiled in Paris as the Peace to Resistance of the nineteen nine World's Fair. It was engineered as a testament to France's technological machinations and as a monumental way to mark the one d

anniversary of the French Revolution. Gustav Eiffel, whose company designed and built the tower, added a number of furtive extras to it, ranging from a secret apartment to telegraph and radio broadcast equipment. It was this apartment that may have saved the Eiffel Tower from being torn down as a temporary exhibit left over from the World's Fair, a demolition that was slated for twenty years from the time of

its debut. Turns out, the French government discovered and appreciated the wireless Yes wireless in eighteen eighty nine telegraphed transmitter and radio antenna so much that it opted to keep and care for the tower indefinitely. In nineteen o three, just six short years before the tower was set to be demolished, Eiffel doubled down on his invitations to scientists to host brainy discussions and conduct research from within the

towers little known apartment. The apartment, about a thousand feet or three ds off the ground, was outfitted with cozy rugs, chairs, and other comforts, but it also had adjacent spaces to

serve as many laboratories. From this bird level apartment, the atmosphere was measured, the stars and planets were observed, and the bounds of physics were explored by some of the greatest minds of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, and in a French captain experimented with wireless broadcast signals, eventually sending signals as far as North America. The Eiffel Tower and its scientific purpose became too important to the

French government to be torn down. Just a few years later, the tower would play a vital role in World War One, when the French military used the our list communicators to transmit to ships in the Atlantic Ocean. Today, the Eiffel Tower receives about seven million visitors each year, and those who purchase a ticket to the top of the tower can look for a window at the apartment where Thomas Edison once conversed with Eiffel and other invitation only guests.

For the most part, the apartment's original appearance has been preserved. There's a pholstered furniture, a grand piano, and burnished web cabinets against a backdrop of patterned wallpaper. The apartment's laboratory areas still exhibits some of their original scientific equipment, and there's an observatory above the apartment that's not open to public viewing. And although you can't stay in the original

apartment at the Eiffel Tower, there's now another option. The Gustav Eiffel Reception Room, situated at a hundred and eighty seven feet or fifty seven meters off the ground, is open for event rental for a starting fee of seventy pounds sterling, which is about ten thousand dollars. Today's episode was written by Laurel d and produced by Tyler Clang. The brain Stuff is a production of I Heart Radio's

How Stuff Works. For more in this and lots of other topics that aren't at all Tall Tales, visit our home planet, how stuff works dot com, and for more podcasts from my heart Radio, visit the I heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.

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