There is a persistent urban legend about American tourists going to the Place de la Bastille in Paris and feeling cheated when they discover that the Bastille Fortress isn’t even there any more.
Perhaps this has really happened at one time or another, but I think most tourists from all over the world are aware that the Bastille was destroyed during the French Revolution after being stormed by the people of Paris on July 14, 1789, for which reason July 14 is still celebrated every year as the French National Holiday.
From 1812 to 1846, the Place de la Bastille was dominated by a bizarre monument, a huge elephant, twenty-four meters high, made of wood and plaster. This elephant was Napoleon’s idea. He wanted it to be made of bronze melted down from cannons captured in battles by his victorious armies. But just to show what it would look like, he first ordered a full-scale mock-up made of wood and plaster to be made and set up in the center of the square.
The bronze version was never made, but the wood-and-plaster mock-up stood in the center of the Place de la Bastille for thirty-four years. With each passing year it got more and more bedraggled. The plaster started to crumble and the hollow spaces inside were infested with rats.
At one point it was discovered that a young boy was sleeping inside the elephant at night. This discovery was worth a few lines in the Paris newspapers, under the heading faits divers for miscellaneous curiosities, and these reports gave Victor Hugo the idea of using the elephant as the secret home of the street urchin Gavroche in his novel Les Misérables.

Place de la Bastille
Until recently the Place de la Bastille was a huge open square — not in the shape of a square but more of a sloppy circle — in which motor vehicles careened around wildly at high speeds with little semblance of order. This was changed from 2018 to 2021, when the Place de la Bastille was thoroughly rearranged so as to reduce car traffic, make more room for cyclists and pedestrians and plant several dozen additional trees.

July Column from Arsenal Harbor
Until then, the July Column, in the middle of the square, was generally not accessible because of the motor traffic swirling around it. This column commemorates the events of July 1830, which resulted in the fall of King Charles X of France and the beginning of the reign of King Louis-Philippe.

Opéra Bastille from Arsenal Harbor
The magnificent new Paris opera house, the Opéra Bastille, was inaugurated on July 14, 1989, on the two hundredth anniversary of the storming of the Bastille.
My photos in this post are from 2012. I revised the text in 2017 and 2022.
See more posts on the Place de la Bastille.
Great to know that the traffic here will be reduced and the column made more accessible – I have never got close to it!
I managed to make it over to the column as it was hosting a protest about something (I dont know what) which was obviously important enough to have the traffic diverted away.
It is still a centre for protests. Thanks for sharing Don.
Leslie
That explains a lot! Thanks Don!