Aura Invalides: An Unusual Night out in Paris

   1
Aura Invalides: An Unusual Night out in Paris
Editor’s Note: We’re giving two lucky winners the chance to win tickets to Aura Invalides! Click here for more information We gathered at dusk, just outside the Place Vauban entrance to Les Invalides, anticipation growing for an unusual evening that would take us inside the city’s most iconic dome for a multi-media experience combining sound, music and video-mapping. Like the Eiffel Tower or Notre Dame, Les Invalides is generally “just there,” a golden domed beauty which rises now and then on the skyline as we go about the city. To get inside Le Dôme just after dark, when it is closed to the general public, and reflect on its history and beauty amid swirling colors and rousing music was surely going to be a special treat. The event, Aura Invalides, is one of a series of tours-with-a-difference and immersive events offered by the sightseeing tour agency Cultival.  Aura Invalides. courtesy of Cultival Even standing in a queue, the sense that history all around is inescapable. Yes, it all began as a yet another Louis XIV show-off project when he commissioned the Dôme des Invalides as a church for royal mass. He insisted, characteristically, on a baroque masterpiece which would rise higher than any other building in Paris, at least until the Eiffel Tower was built nearly 200 years later. Gilded on the outside and lavishly decorated inside, it seemed to be just another of the Sun King’s tributes to himself. However, just a few years later, in 1674, the Hôtel des Invalides, commissioned by Louis on the same site, opened its doors to injured and elderly soldiers who needed to be looked after, a role the institution still plays today. He was justly proud of this, referring to it as “the best decision of my reign.” I like to remember this charitable act when I encounter, for example, the excess of bling Louis indulged in all over Versailles.  Aura Invalides. Courtesy of Cultival
  • SUBSCRIBE
  • ALREADY SUBSCRIBED?

Lead photo credit : Aura Invalides. Courtesy of Cultival

Previous Article Street Art Stories in Paris
Next Article Napoleon’s Fortune Teller: How Eerie Predictions Came True


After a career teaching Modern Languages (French and German), Marian turned to freelance writing and is now a member of the British Guild of Travel Writers, specializing in all things French and – especially! – Parisian. She’s in Paris as often as possible, visiting places old and new, finding out their stories and writing it all up as soon as she gets home. She also runs the podcast series City Breaks, offering in-depth coverage of popular city break destinations, with lots of background history and cultural information. The Paris series currently has 22 episodes, but more will surely follow when time allows!

Comments

  • Ellen Corradini
    2025-10-17 11:31:01
    Ellen Corradini
    Thank you for the wonderful article, Marian. I've enjoyed the Atelier des Lumières over the years and recently discovered Aura Invalides. I've bought a ticket for early November and can't wait to experience it.

    REPLY