A beach volleyball training session takes place against the backdrop of the grandeur of the Eiffel Tower. PARIS – There is a glorious folly to the Paris Olympics, the first in the city since 1924, as if France in its perennial revolutionary ardor took a century to ponder something unimaginable, the transformation of a great city into a stadium. The heart of Paris has fallen silent in preparation for the opening ceremony on July 26, when a flotilla will usher thousands of athletes down the Seine, under the low-slung bridges where lovers like to linger.

Not since the Covid-19 pandemic has the city been so still or so constrained. Roads are closed; newly built stands for spectators line the riverbanks; fences enclose sidewalks; and residents need police-issued QR codes to reach their homes. The golden cherubs, nymphs and winged horses of the Pont Alexandre III gaze out on metal bleachers and posses of police.

The Olympic project is almost unthinkable in its audacity, and a major security headache, but then again, the Eiffel Tower would never have risen above Paris in 1889 if the many naysayers had prevailed. Now, between its first and second floors, five giant Olympic rings adorn the tower. They glow at night over the Champ de Mars park, where the beach volleyball competition will be held.

Nearby flows the Seine, beautified at a cost of about US$1.5 billion (S$2 billion) and clean enough, it is said, for several Olympic events, including two 10km swims and the triathlon. Swimm.