Louvre–Rivoli station

This layout is completed with backlit panels indicating the name of the station according to a specific typography, as well as glass benches available to travelers.

At the same time, the Louvre station became Louvre–Rivoli in order to highlight its service to the Rue de Rivoli, whose name commemorates a victory won by Napoleon Bonaparte over Austria in 1797.

On 1 May 1991, the station was vandalized in a spectacular manner by a group of taggers seeking thereby, to force the entry of their discipline into the institution represented by the Louvre.

At the same time as the start of this full automation, the reproductions of works were withdrawn in 2011 with a view to renovating the station, operated by RATP as part of the Un métro + beau program.

[6] The station reopened its doors on 26 November 2015 after twelve weeks of redevelopment work that required its closure to the public.

A 15-meter-long crypt, the ceiling of which rests on closely spaced pillars, extends it to its western end since the introduction of the six-car train line in the 1960s.

The lighting is provided by spotlights oriented towards the walls, and the name of the station appears on backlit panels, in white capital letters on a black background, in a specific serif typeface.