Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Notre Dame’s rebuild a tough task

Restoring the gutted landmark won’t be cheap or quick, but a global army of experts can help.

- By Jill Lawless and Raf Casert

LONDON — Notre Dame in Paris is not the first great cathedral to suffer a devastatin­g fire, and it probably won’t be the last.

In a sense, that is good news. A global army of experts and craftspeop­le can be called on for the long, complex process of restoring the gutted landmark.

The work will face substantia­l challenges — starting immediatel­y, with the urgent need to protect the inside of the 850-year-old cathedral from the elements, after its timberbeam­ed roof was consumed by flames.

The first priority is to put up a temporary metal or plastic roof to stop rain from getting in. Then, engineers and architects will begin to assess the damage.

Fortunatel­y, Notre Dame is a thoroughly documented building. Over the years, historians and archaeolog­ists have made exhaustive plans and images, including minutely detailed, 3-D laser-scanned re-creations of the interior.

Duncan Wilson, chief executive of the conservati­on organizati­on Historic England, said Tuesday that the cathedral will need to be made secure without disturbing the debris scattered inside, which may provide valuable informatio­n — and material — for restorers.

“The second challenge is actually salvaging the material,” he said. “Some of that material may be reusable, and that’s a painstakin­g exercise. It’s like an archaeolog­ical excavation.”

Despite fears at the height of the inferno that the whole cathedral would be lost, the structure appears intact. Its two rectangula­r towers still jut into the skyline, and the great stone vault stands atop heavy walls supported by massive flying buttresses. An edifice built to last an eternity withstood its greatest test.

Tom Nickson, a senior lecturer in medieval art and architectu­re at London’s Courtauld Institute, said the stone vault “acted as a kind of fire door between the highly flammable roof and the highly flammable interior” — just as the cathedral’s medieval builders intended.

Now, careful checks will be needed to determine whether the stones of the vaulted ceiling have been weakened and cracked by the heat. If so, the whole vault may need to be torn down and re-erected.

The cathedral’s exquisite stained-glass rose windows appear intact but are probably suffering “thermal shock” from intense heat followed by cold water, said Jenny Alexander, an expert on medieval art and architectu­re at the University of Warwick. That means the glass, set in lead, could have sagged or been weakened and will need minute examinatio­n.

Once the building has been stabilized and the damage assessed, restoratio­n work can begin. It’s likely to be an internatio­nal effort.

“Structural engineers, stained-glass experts, stone experts are all going to be packing their bags and heading for Paris in the next few weeks,” Alexander said.

One big decision will be whether to preserve the cathedral just as it was before the fire, or to take a more creative approach.

It’s not always a straightfo­rward choice. Notre Dame’s spire, destroyed in Monday’s blaze, was added to the Gothic cathedral during 19th-century renovation­s. Should it be rebuilt as it was, or replaced with a new design for the 21st century?

Financial and political considerat­ions, as well as aesthetic ones, are likely to play a part in the decision.

Getting materials may also be a challenge. The cathedral roof was made from oak beams cut from centuries-old trees. Even in the 13th century, they were hard to come by. Nickson said there is probably no country in Europe with big enough trees today.

Alternativ­es could include a different type of structure made from smaller beams, or even a metal roof — though that would be unpopular with purists.

The restored building will have to reflect modernday health and safety standards. But Eric Salmon, a former site manager at the Paris cathedral, said it is impossible to eliminate all risk.

“It is like a street accident. It can happen anywhere, anytime,” said Salmon, who now serves as technical director at the Notre Dame cathedral in Strasbourg, France.

Experts agree the project will take years, if not decades. A government appeal for funds has already raised hundreds of millions of euros from French businesses.

But few doubt that Notre Dame will rise again.

“Cathedrals are stone phoenixes — reminders that out of adversity we may be reborn,” said Emma Wells, a buildings archaeolog­ist at the University of York.

“The silver lining, if we can call it that, is this allows for historians and archaeolog­ists to come in and uncover more of its history than we ever knew before.”

 ?? KAMIL ZIHNIOGLU/AP ?? Experts inspect the damaged Notre Dame cathedral Tuesday in Paris after Monday’s fire.
KAMIL ZIHNIOGLU/AP Experts inspect the damaged Notre Dame cathedral Tuesday in Paris after Monday’s fire.

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