
I was surprised in reading that there could be a similar analogy miles away on a Parisian bridge …. ..in news because it is partially broken unable to bear the weight of such tied items – those padlocks. Part eyesore, part symbol of everlasting affection, the 700,000 (!) metal "love locks" emblazoned with the initials of visiting lovers have been attached to the Pont des Arts footbridge that crosses the Seine River in Paris for seven years or so. It is now reported that part of the bridge has collapsed under the weight of the locks. A five-foot span of the bridge's metal mesh railing came down recently, according to Britain's Telegraph newspaper. (Luckily for the boaters below, it collapsed onto the bridge, not into the water.) As aptly Parisian as the phenomenon may seem, "love locks" may have been an Italian import — and a recent one at that. According to BBC, some trace its rise in popularity to two Italian novels, published in 1992 and 2006: Federico Moccia's "Tre Metri Sopra il Cielo" ("Three Metres Above the Sky") and "Ho Voglia di Te" ("I Desire You")… It spread to Russia, and Paris's Pont des Arts and other bridges, as well as far-flung destinations such as China, Hungary, Germany and Guam. Seemingly everywhere the craze goes, it brings trouble, or at least some debate. In 2007, the mayors of Florence and Rome instituted fines as a deterrent against fastening padlocks to their city bridges. Tourists have taken to the Eiffel Tower, the Brooklyn Bridge, and London's bridges and fences. In Paris, the locks spawned a protest campaign called "No Love Locks," petitioning tourists to stop defacing the city's otherwise unadorned bridges with unsightly locks – and they are proved right as part of the parapet of the world famous Pont Des Arts bridge in Paris has collapsed under the weight of the growing number of locks that had been attached.


18th June 2014.