In addition the Petit Palais, where Paris’s Museum of Fine Arts is currently housed and the Grand Palais, a building that is most noted for its art shows but has also been used by couture designers like Chanel as a fashion venue.
It is also during the Expo that the Paris Metro’s first subway line was inaugurated. Under the leadership of an engineer named Fulgence Bienvenüe, the Paris Route 1 connected the outer neighborhood of Vincennes to the interior of Paris proper. This was a significant shift after the radical social upheavals that occurred as a result of Baron Haussmann’s refiguring of Paris. Stops on Route 1 included stops along Champs Elysee and the Bastille prison.
The Exposition's expanse and attractions
The fair ground was located in the 7th arrondissement, a traditionally aristocratic neighborhood and home to the city's most social privileged residents. The 7th arrondissement had also been home to previous Paris fairs but this time it covered between 543-570 acres. It's expanse being comparable to the size of the 1893 Chicago Columbian Fair.
Modes of transportation to move the 50 million attendees from one section of the fair to another, included the three-tiered moving walkway captured by Thomas Edison on film. The walkway covered the area from Champs de Mars where the Eiffel Tower is located to the Esplanade de Invalides, which houses France's military history.
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