Gulf Times

Notre-Dame reaches milestone as damaged scaffoldin­g is cleared

-

Reconstruc­tion of NotreDame Cathedral in Paris reached a turning point yesterday with the removal of the last portions of scaffoldin­g that melted during last year’s blaze, which will allow crucial protective and stabilisat­ion work to proceed.

The delicate work was begun in June to clear away the tonnes of tangled tubes that were surroundin­g the church’s spire when it collapsed as millions of people watched in horror on April 15, 2019.

The spire and other parts of the roof were undergoing renovation work when the fire erupted, threatenin­g to destroy the 13thcentur­y gothic landmark.

While the monument’s walls remained standing, the extensive heat and loss of much of the oak roof framework compromise­d their structural integrity.

The mass of molten scaffoldin­g

– some 40,000 tubes weighing 200 tonnes, suspended dozens of metres above the cathedral’s floor – also risked crashing to the ground.

Culture Minister Roselyne Bachelot, accompanie­d by JeanLouis Georgelin, the army general overseeing the restoratio­n, were on hand as the final pieces were removed.

“The threat this scaffoldin­g posed to the cathedral has been lifted,” Georgelin said. “Now we can tackle the final safeguardi­ng steps.”

Before removing the damaged tubes, they had to be enclosed in a new network of scaffoldin­g to ensure they would not move.

Another metal grid was then erected so that workers could be lowered by ropes to carefully cut the tubes apart.

Sections were then lifted out the crane towering 80m over the cathedral, and late in October workers were finally able to reach and stabilise a massive beam that threatened to drop.

The renovation work has been slowed by delays due to bad weather, concerns over lead pollution, and most recently the coronaviru­s pandemic.

In July, President Emmanuel

Macron said the spire would be rebuilt to its original form, in a change of heart after previously calling for a “contempora­ry” touch.

He has vowed to have NotreDame rebuilt in five years, though some architects have warned that such a massive undertakin­g could take much longer.

 ??  ?? A photograph taken yesterday shows the melted scaffoldin­g on the roof of Paris’s Notre-Dame cathedral during reconstruc­tion works. Reconstruc­tion of cathedral reached a turning point yesterday with the removal of the last portions of scaffoldin­g that melted during last year’s blaze, which will allow crucial protective and stabilisat­ion work to proceed.
A photograph taken yesterday shows the melted scaffoldin­g on the roof of Paris’s Notre-Dame cathedral during reconstruc­tion works. Reconstruc­tion of cathedral reached a turning point yesterday with the removal of the last portions of scaffoldin­g that melted during last year’s blaze, which will allow crucial protective and stabilisat­ion work to proceed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Qatar