La Grande Arche de la Défense, a hollowed-cube building was inaugurated on July 1989, two hundred years after the French Revolution began. It is located just west of Paris, on the axis formed by the Louvre Museum, the Champs-Elysées avenue, the Arc de Triomphe, and the Avenue de la Grande Armée.
The Eiffel tower was completed 100 years before, on the 100th anniversary of the French revolution (1889)
The Eiffel Tower.
Charles V built the bastille
No; the Opéra-Bastille is a modern building. You are thinking of the Opéra Garnier, which is indeed the setting of the novel and later musical. And yes, it is built over an underground river.
The Bastille was a prison and fortress built in the 14th century to protect Paris's eastern entrance. At the height of its use, it held political prisoners, but by 1789, it was mostly vacant except for supplies like gunpowder. In fact, the Bastille was supposed to be demolished and replaced with a town square. Revolutionaries had other ideas, though—they wanted to get at that gunpowder, so they stormed the Bastille on July 14, 1789, losing about 100 people in the process. However, they ended up winning the day and proceeded to execute the Bastille's governor and dismantle the building entirely. Interestingly enough, they don't even call it Bastille Day in France—they use la Fête nationale or le 14 juillet.
The Bastille was made a prison under the reign of Louis XIII.
the titanic Belfast building is being built because it was the 100th anniversary of titanic sinking and all those people that died.
The Seagram Building in Manhattan.
Walter Chrysler was famous for building The Chrysler Building. It was the tallest building up until 1974, when The Sears Tower was built in Chicago.
jackson ALVEREZ
the famous buildings is buildings that was famous well most buildings was built a long time ago
taj mahal
The French began to build the Bastille in 1357 as a fortress but made a prison in 1417. It was stormed on July 14, 1789.
B.E. Short