Oman Daily Observer

Restart of Notre-dame restoratio­n pushed back to August 19

-

PARIS: Renovation work at Notre-dame Cathedral in Paris could resume on August 19, a government official said Friday, after the clean-up was halted last month over fears that workers could be exposed to lead poisoning.

Testing revealed dangerousl­y high levels of lead contaminat­ion at the site as well as at nearby schools and other buildings, prompting fears that workers and residents risked exposure to the toxic metal. Hundreds of tonnes of lead in the roof and steeple melted during the April 15 blaze that nearly destroyed the gothic masterpiec­e, with winds spreading the particles well beyond the church’s grounds.

But after weeks of denying any poisoning risks, authoritie­s admitted in late July that anticontam­ination measures were insufficie­nt, and two schools near the church were closed after hazardous lead levels were detected.

Since then officials have been racing to implement tougher safety measures for workers at the site, while deploying new methods to remove lead residue from school playground­s.

Prefect Michel Cadot, the government’s top official for the Paris region, will allow work to resume “once there is a guarantee the new measures are in place,” his office said in a statement.

Officials had originally said the clean-up could begin next week, but the target date is now set for August 19, it said.

This week workers dressed head-to-toe in white hazmat suits sprayed a blue-green gel onto the playground at the two closed schools on the Rue Saintbenoi­t, where dozens of children had been attending summer daycare programmes.

According to city officials, the gel attracted and trapped the lead particles on the ground as it dried, and was later removed with high-pressure hoses.

That procedure and others will also be used on the square in front of Notre-dame and on streets in the immediatel­y vicinity.

Readings of more than 70 microgramm­es per square metre indicate potential health hazards, but testing has found much higher levels at buildings as far as one kilometre from Notre-dame. Last week, the city revealed that some schools and daycares beyond a 500-metre perimeter of the church still showed isolated readings of more than 1,000 microgramm­es on playground­s or windowsill­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman