The Eiffel Tower was built as a temporary structure and was scheduled to be demolished in 1909
Gustave Eiffel's tower was built for the 1889 Paris World's Fair (Exposition Universelle) with an explicit agreement that it would be dismantled after 20 years. Many Parisians hated it — it was called 'an eyesore', 'a metal asparagus', and 'the tragic street lamp'. It was saved from demolition in 1909 when it proved invaluable as a radio transmission tower — having already been used to send radio signals across the English Channel. The first permanent use was broadcasting time signals to ships. It stayed. It is now the most visited paid monument on Earth.
The Eiffel Tower is so embedded in Parisian identity and global iconography that imagining Paris without it seems impossible. Finding it was nearly demolished — and only saved because of 20th-century radio technology that didn't exist when it was built — makes the existence of one of history's most iconic structures feel contingent and lucky.
“The Eiffel Tower was supposed to be demolished in 1909. It was saved because it made a useful radio tower. Parisians called it 'an eyesore' and 'a metal asparagus'. It's now the world's most-visited paid monument. 🗼 #OddlyHuman”