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Notre Dame on the mend with medieval tools

Photo courtesy The National

In a spectacular operation to rebuild the fire-ravaged Notre Dame Cathedral, massive oak trusses were hoisted from a barge on to the Paris monument on Tuesday. Source: The National

Huge crowds gathered along a bridge over the Seine River and on its banks to watch trusses weighing 7 to 7.5 tonnes moved into place in the delicate operation.

“I think it’s a magical moment for a lot of Parisians this morning,” said French Transport Minister Clement Beaune, noting that the Seine will be at the centre of the Paris Olympic Games in 2024.

Gen Jean-Louis Georgelin, appointed by French President Emmanuel Macron to oversee the Notre Dame’s reconstruction, said that even the heavy traffic expected during the summer games will not stop work on the world-renowned cathedral.

“We will work for the cathedral during the Olympics in order to be ready in December 2024,” he said. “This is our goal.”

Notre Dame, which oversees old Paris from an island on the Seine, was consumed by flames in 2019, and it was decided to rebuild the monument using methods of yore.

Expert carpenters used medieval methods to construct the trusses measuring 14 to 16 metres wide and 12 to 13 metres high.

Guided by ropes, they were being placed on the roof around the area of the spire, which crumbled to ashes during the fire, and the two arms of the transept, the wooden skeleton of Notre Dame.

A statement said the silhouette of Notre Dame, now enmeshed in scaffolding, should emerge on the skyline as work advances.