World gets first look at Notre Dame’s new interior 5 years after devastating fire
While part of the cathedral, which was designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1991, was undamaged, nearly $1 billion in pledged donations were made within a day of the fire.
Rebuilding Notre Dame de Paris, the public body responsible for the conservation and restoration of the cathedral, estimated at the time that it would cost $760 million.
Work quickly began on the medieval monument immortalized in history, film and literature as teams of specialist craftsmen flew in from around the world to help out.
Louise Bausiere, who spent the last two years working on the cathedral’s knave, told NBC News on Wednesday said she hoped people would admire what the team of craftspeople had done.
“To make it in five years was hard,” she said. “We had to do it, there was no choice.”
The team “took photos and looked at archives and made it exactly the same,” she said. “The techniques, the visuals, the aesthetics, everything is exactly the same.”
It was “easier today because of technology,” she added.
Macron’s visit comes at a time of political turmoil in France over Prime Minister Michel Barnier’s plans for a budget involving 60 billion euros ($62 billion) in spending cuts and tax hikes despite lacking a majority in Parliament, leading to threats to topple the government from far-right leader Marine Le Pen.
And his administration is hailing the reconstruction as a symbol of national unity and French can-do.
Since the cathedral’s first stone was laid in the 12th century, the cathedral has undergone frequent revivals.
It was also the site of the coronation of Napoleon I and his wife, Empress Joséphine, in 1804, and its huge bells rang out on Aug. 24, 1944, to celebrate the liberation of Paris from German occupiers.
The stone gargoyles and religious relics it housed drew flocks of pilgrims for centuries.
Victor Hugo’s 1831 novel “Notre-Dame de Paris,” known to many as “The Hunchback of Notre-Dame,” not only immortalized the cathedral’s story, but inspired a major restoration of the site.
After the modern-day restoration, Macron will return on Dec. 7 to deliver an address and attend the consecration of the new altar during a solemn Mass the following day.