Weeks after a brazen, multi-million dollar jewellery heist exposed catastrophic security failures, the Louvre is facing a new crisis: a long-neglected water leak that has damaged hundreds of priceless books, raising urgent questions about whether the world’s most famous museum is literally falling apart from within.
Deputy Administrator Francis Steinbock confirmed that between 300-400 volumes, primarily Egyptology journals and scientific texts from the late 19th and early 20th centuries, were soaked in the leak. While officials claim “no heritage artefacts” and “no precious books” were irreparably lost, the incident is the third major operational disaster in as many months, following the forced closure of a gallery due to structural weaknesses and the unsolved October jewel theft.

Most damningly, Steinbock admitted the plumbing problem that caused the leak “had been known for years,” with repairs only scheduled for next year—a delay that directly validates a scathing October audit which slammed the museum for prioritising new artwork purchases over essential “maintenance and renovation of buildings.”
Why It Matters
The Louvre isn’t suffering from bad luck, but rather, from sheer negligence. The sequence is a perfect indictment of failed stewardship: a known plumbing issue is left to fester for years, then wrecks historic collections, all while a separate, known security flaw allowed thieves to waltz out with crown jewels.
The museum’s attempt to downplay the damage—calling the soaked books mere “scientific documentation”—is a patronising insult. These are not replaceable paperbacks; they are primary research materials from the dawn of Egyptology, their historical value immense. That they were left vulnerable in a building with a “known” leak is a profound betrayal of scholarly and public trust.
The common thread is the damning audit: the Louvre has been spending like a billionaire art collector while its roof and pipes rot. If the heist was a drama; this leak is considered a slow-motion tragedy. Together, they prove the museum is so busy acquiring shiny new treasures, it’s now letting its foundational ones—both jewels and knowledge—be stolen or destroyed by its own decaying infrastructure.















