New Straits Times

Notre-Dame rises from ashes 5 years after fire

- AFP

Five years after being ravaged by fire, the Notre-Dame Cathedral has returned to its former splendour months ahead of its planned reopening, participan­ts in a recent visit to the monument said.

The fire at the Unesco-listed cathedral, which used to welcome 12 million visitors a year, shocked the world on April 15, 2019.

But now, the inside of NotreDame is at its most luminous in living memory, visitors said.

“It is wonderful to see these colours that had completely disappeare­d,” said Notre-Dame vicerector Guillaume Normand as he inspected the restored chapel. “Stunning.”

When the public returns to

Notre-Dame in December, they will get an “unequalled perception of its dimension”, said the cathedral’s rector, Olivier Ribadeau Dumas.

He said he was “humbled” in the face of “those who created, preserved or saved it and those who are now restoring it”.

Ongoing work is on track to meet the December deadline for reopening, the head of the reconstruc­tion said last month.

The monument already had a key moment in February when scaffoldin­g came off around its spire, which authoritie­s say will be fully visible by the time the Paris Summer Olympics kick off in July. The spire has been covered in lead, a material that has caused much debate because of its potential toxicity.

In December, the cathedral regained its great cross and got a new golden rooster to replace one that was destroyed in the fire.

Initially, President Emmanuel Macron promised the building would be fully restored by the time the Olympics open, but the date was pushed back after restoratio­n work hit several snags.

Authoritie­s have still not determined the cause of the fire, but believe it was started accidental­ly.

A fundraisin­g drive launched within hours of the fire has attracted donations of €846 million. Restoratio­n work has been constant since 2019, except for a few weeks during the Covid crisis.

All key challenges of the restoratio­n had been met, said Philippe Jost, president of the Rebuilding Notre-Dame de Paris public body.

The rebuilding of the nave, using wood from around 1,000 trees from French forests, was among the toughest tasks, Jost said.

Some 250 companies and hundreds of craftsmen, architects and trade profession­als have been involved in the restoratio­n.

The cathedral’s organ, undamaged by the fire but covered in lead dust, has been fully cleaned, although it will take six months of harmonisat­ion before its 8,000 pipes recover their full potential.

Natural light in the cathedral is at its brightest in living memory after the cleanup, Jost said.

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