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Macron admires Notre Dame restoration from cathedral’s fire-damaged rooftop

Paris, France
Reuters

President Emmanuel Macron on Thursday applauded the painstaking work to restore Notre-Dame de Paris, two years after a fire destroyed the cathedral’s centuries-old attic and sent its spire crashing through the vaults below.

In the hours after the blaze, Macron told a distraught nation that the cathedral, which dates back to the 12th century, would be rebuilt and later promised it would be reopened to worshippers by 2024, when France hosts the Olympic Games.

France Paris Notre Dame restoration works

View of the reconstruction site of the roof of the Notre-Dame de Paris Cathedral, which was damaged in a devastating fire two years ago, as restoration works continue, in Paris, France, on 15th April. PICTURE: Reuters/Benoit Tessier/Pool

More than 700 days after workers scrambled to shore-up Notre-Dame’s flying buttresses, save its 13th-century stained-glass rose windows and install movement sensors, the effort to make the site secure ahead of restoration is almost complete.

From a rooftop platform, the president, dressed in a dark boiler suit and a white safety helmet, peered down into the cathedral’s damaged transept and thanked workers on the site.

“We’re all impressed with what we see, with the work that has been achieved in two years. Bravo,” Macron told workers with the Paris skyline behind him.

“We’ve done a lot, and we’ve avoided the worst.”

For many in the capital the emotion of that night remains raw.

“We were all stunned,” said Paris resident Stacy Monsauret. “And then it was just sadness.”

The first phase of the salvage operation was complicated by the need to cut up a 200-tonne mass of twisted metal left after the fire consumed scaffolding that had been erected around the wood-and-lead spire at the time of the blaze. 

Work was also temporarily halted because of worries over lead contamination and slowed at times by the coronavirus pandemic.

Technicians still have to reinforce some of the vaults closest to those destroyed with wooden arch-shaped frames that are lifted into place by crane, and extend a tarpaulin roof over the transept to protect the restoration work once it begins.

“Holding up”
The cathedral will only be declared out of danger once the phase to secure the site is complete, but all the indications were positive, said Jeremie Patrier-Leitus, a spokesman for the public body overseeing the restoration. 

“The cathedral hasn’t moved since the fire, it’s holding up.”

The cathedral will be restored to its original design, including the 96-metre (315-feet) spire designed by architect Eugene Viollet-le-Duc and added in the mid-1800s. The felling of oaks for the new spire’s frame has begun. 

Financing for the restoration was not a concern yet, said General Jean-Louis Georgelin, the former army chief of staff named by Macron to head the renovation. Some 834 million euros in donations flooded in from billionaire tycoons and households in France and abroad in the fire’s aftermath.

“We will need all these donations to complete the necessary work. We need people to keep giving money,” Georgelin told France Inter radio. 

Tearful Parisians and stunned tourists gazed in disbelief while the inferno raged at the cathedral, which marks the very centre of Paris. Some sang liturgical music in harmonies late into the night as they stood vigil, while others prayed. 

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