Win a helicopter tour across Paris and lunch at the Eiffel Tower this Black Friday

Published: July 17, 2024
madame brasserie view

Our Black Friday Giveaway has now ended.

An amazing opportunity to see the city of lights from its sunny skies and indulge in some classic Parisian cuisine. The lucky winner plus one guest will board a six-passenger Airbus H135 helicopter and take a 25-minute ride across the capital, taking in views of Parc des Princes, Bois de Boulogne, the Longchamp hippodrome, the Saint-Cloud park Château de Versailles and the Roi Soleil’s gardens.

You’ll touch down just behind Versaille at Saint-Cyr l’Ecole, where you’ll be served drinks while your knowledgeable pilot gives you an intro into the world of aviation. They’ll explain exactly how the chopper works and you’ll even get the chance to explore other scenic destinations through an immersive VR headset!

Your return journey back to Paris is equally breath-taking – be sure to watch out for La Defense quarter, bridges over the Seine, Trocadero, Tour Montparnasse and of course a stunning view of the Eiffel Tower.

When the adrenaline settles, you’ll head to Madame Brasserie on the first floor of the Eiffel Tower, for a beautiful Parisian lunch with views over Place du Trocadéro and Bois de Boulogne Forest. With two Michelin-starred chef Thierry Marx at the helm, you are in for something special: this is seasonal French fare at its very best.

How to enter

For a chance to win this incredible prize, all you have to do is purchase any of our Paris passes between 9AM Tuesday 22 November 2022 and 11:59PM Tuesday 29 November 2022. Once you’ve purchased, you’ll be automatically entered into the giveaway. Easy!

If you’re the lucky winner, we’ll contact you by email by December 15, 2022, so look out for us in your inbox.

Click here to view giveaway terms and conditions

Jessica Basi
Paris Travel Expert

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The glass pyramid at the Louvre Museum in Paris.
Blog

The Louvre or Musee d'Orsay: Which is Better?

Paris is a veritable paradise for art lovers, with over 1,000 galleries throughout the city, as well as some of the most exciting contemporary street art on the planet. No surprises there really. We’re talking, after all, about the birthplace of Impressionism; a city that has produced and nurtured a quite extraordinary number of household names down the centuries – Toulouse-Lautrec, Matisse, Manet, Modigliani and Renoir to name just a few. You can visit iconic pieces by these and other greats (*cough* da Vinci *cough*) in galleries and museums across town, chief among which, of course, are the world-renowned Louvre and Musée d’Orsay. But which is better? We took a deep dive to find out. The Louvre Name: The Louvre Museum or just plain old Louvre, it was briefly renamed Musée Napoléon during the Emperor’s reign from 1804-1815. Age: The Louvre opened in August 1793 with an exhibition of 537 paintings. It’s housed inside the much older Louvre Palace, built in the late 12th Century. 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Put 20 historians, art critics, architects and tourism experts in a room and they’d likely be arguing about this till kingdom come. The truth is that both the Louvre and Musée d’Orsay are among the planet’s undisputed art behemoths, each with its own unique selling points. For sheer range and breadth that covers the entire history of art from ancient civilizations to the 19th Century, the Louvre’s collection is near-impossible to match. A museum that can boast Hellenistic statuary, an ancient Egyptian sphinx and the Mona Lisa is not to be sniffed at. If, however, you’re an aficionado of modern French painting, sculpture and turn-of-the-century architecture and, crucially, have less time on your hands, then it’s the excellent Musée d’Orsay every time. In town for a few days? Buy a 4- or 6-day Paris Pass and you won’t have to pick a favorite. The pass gets you entry to dozens of Paris attractions – including both the Louvre and Musée d’Orsay – for one money-saving price.
Stuart Bak
Stuart Bak
awesome-view-earth-under-airplane-wing
Blog

10 Tips on How to Overcome Jet Lag

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Erin Hagen
Eiffel Tower 2nd Floor Guided Climb
Louvre Museum

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