People walk on the esplanade des Droits De L'homme at the Trocadero Square in front of the Eiffel Tower, where a giant artwork by French street artist and photographer Jean Rene, aka JR, is on displayed in Paris. - AFP

The Eiffel Tower will reopen on July 16 after several months of closure due to the coronavirus pandemic, the Paris landmark's operator said on Thursday. Visitor numbers will be limited to 10,000 a day to meet social distancing requirements, fewer than half of their pre-COVID levels, operator Sete told AFP. All floors of the monument will be accessible to visitors, except some areas where renovation work is ongoing.

Only 50 percent of the usual numbers will be allowed in the lifts. The Eiffel Tower has been undergoing the most extensive revamp of its 130-year history to look its best for the 2024 Paris Olympics, including with a paint job to give it a distinctly golden hue.

But painting was suspended after traces of lead were found in existing layers, making it hazardous to continue. The re-opening marks the emergence of the 10-tonne metal landmark from its longest closure since World War II. It was shut down for more than three months during the first COVID wave in the spring of last year, and then again in the autumn.

"After several months of closure, we are impatient to have our staff and visitors back with, of course, a strict compliance with sanitary protocols," Sete president Jean-François Martins said in a statement. Online bookings will open on June 1. The monument, completed in 1889, usually receives about seven million visitors every year, some three-quarters of them from abroad.

But because of COVID restrictions, it now expects a loss of 70 million euros ($85 million) for 2021, after a loss of 52 million last year, forcing it to seek fresh financing. "We cannot absorb both loss-making years with our existing capital," Martins said, adding he expected the Paris authorities "to help us get through this". France on Wednesday loosened restrictions in a return to semi-normality after more than six months of COVID-19 curbs.

Cafes and restaurants with terraces or rooftop gardens can now offer outdoor dining, under the second phase of a lockdown-lifting plan that should culminate in a full reopening of the economy on June 30. Museums, cinemas and some theatres are also reopening after being closed for 203 days. Disneyland Paris, another tourist magnet, said on Monday it would reopen on June 17. - AFP