Notre Dame fire: Global contest launched to design new spire for blaze-hit cathedral

Notre Dame fire: Global contest launched to design new spire for blaze-hit cathedral
Copyright AFP
Copyright AFP
By Emma BeswickCristina Abellan Matamoros with Reuters, AFP
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Edouard Philippe, the country's prime minister, announced the contest on Thursday and called for "a new spire that is adapted to the techniques and the challenges of our era".

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France has launched an international competition to redesign the spire destroyed in the Notre Dame blaze

Edouard Philippe, the country's prime minister, announced the contest on Thursday and called for "a new spire that is adapted to the techniques and the challenges of our era".

It comes after officials said Monday's inferno was 15 to 30 minutes away from being destroying the iconic cathedral.

That was the claim of Laurent Nunez, France's deputy interior minister. He praised firefighters who he said "risked their own lives" to salvage the 850-year-old landmark's structure and two belfries.

Emergency services will now spend the next 48 hours carrying out a security and safety assessment of the building.

French President Emmanuel Macron told the nation that Notre Dame would be rebuilt within a time frame of five years.

In a live, televised, presidential address to the nation, he vowed the cathedral would be even more beautiful than it was before.

Watch back: 'Notre Dame will be rebuilt in five years, more beautiful than before,' says Macron

Generous donors have pledged more than €750 million to rebuild France's fire-hit Notre Dame cathedral.

A blaze broke out on the Paris landmark on Monday evening, felling its spire and causing the roof to collapse.

But more than 400 firefighters managed to extinguish the flames and preserve the stone structure of the 12-century cathedral.

"The entire fire is out. We've now entered the expertise phase," said Gabriel Plus, the spokesman for the Paris fire brigade, adding that the "violent fire" had "spread very quickly over the entire roof" on "about 1,000 square metres".

Read more: "I had to do something," says €100m Notre Dame donor Francois-Henri Pinault

Interactive: See how Notre Dame looked before and after the fire

"We are favouring the theory of an accident," Paris public prosecutor Remy Heitz said, adding that more than 50 people were involved in the investigation.

He said police would begin questioning the workers involved in the restoration on Tuesday.

Smoke could be seen billowing out from the top of the medieval cathedral as flames leapt out beside its two bell towers on Monday night.

One firefighter was seriously injured in the blaze — the only reported casualty.

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Watch: Moment Notre Dame Cathedral's spire comes crashing down amid fire

Read more: Returning a favour...140 years later: why Hungary is sending Notre Dame donations

While the outside walls and the bell towers were untouched, the fire severely damaged the inside and devastated the upper structure.

Paris fire chief Jean-Claude Gallet said that the operation was now focused on preserving the rear of the cathedral where the most valuable works are located.

But even though the entirety of the fire has been extinguished, authorities are not certain whether the cathedral's structure will resist, said French junior interior Minister Laurent Nunez.

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Read more: How Victor Hugo wrote of Notre Dame in flames in 1831

Investigators will not be allowed to enter the cathedral until experts decide that the building is secure enough.

A group of 16 copper statues escaped the blaze as they were removed from the cathedral's roof on April 11 for restoration work, as part of a €6 million renovation project.

French President Emmanuel Macron pledged to rebuild Notre-Dame in a public address.

"Notre-Dame is burning, and I know the sadness, and this tremor felt by so many fellow French people. But tonight, I'd like to speak of hope too," he said, announcing the launch of a fundraising campaign.

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"Let's be proud, because we built this cathedral more than 800 years ago, we've built it and, throughout the centuries, let it grow and improved it. So I solemnly say tonight: we will rebuild it together," he added.

Millionaire families pledge donations for repair work

Macron also thanked the emergency services and said his thoughts were with Catholics across France and around the world.

However, the newly elected president of the Bishops' Conference of France, Eric de Moulins-Beaufort said that restoring the iconic building would take "years of work".

A French heritage organisation, Fondation du Patrimoine, tweeted that they would launch a "national collection" for the reconstruction of the cathedral.

One of the richest French families, the Pinault family, pledged €100 million for Notre-Dame and French billionaire businessman Bernard Arnault's family and his LVMH luxury goods group will donate €200 million for repairs.

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"The Arnault family and the LVMH group would like to show their solidarity at this time of national tragedy, and are joining up to help rebuild this extraordinary cathedral, which is a symbol of France, of its heritage and of French unity," said the statement.

Paris' mayor Anne Hidalgo has proposed to hot an "international conference for donors" to coordinate the pledges to restore the cathedral.

The Ile-de-France region, which comprises the greater Paris region, will immediately free up €10 million to use for the first repairs.

More than €750 million in donations has now been pledged towards the restoration of the cathedral.

The Vatican's culture minister said the Vatican was willing to offer technical restoration know-how from its museums to help rebuild Notre Dame.

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"Absolute nightmare"

Nicolas Marang, 47, a consultant and a Paris resident for 27 years who witnessed and took a video of Notre Dame's spire falling, told Euronews the blaze was "an absolute nightmare".

"I keep thinking about, all the culture. It is so delicate and now it's all gone. It's all burned," he said.

"People started taking pictures. Some people were crying. It was like being knocked out," he added.

Onlookers gazed on in disbelief at the inferno at the religious landmark, which is located on the Ile de la Cite, an island in the River Seine.

"A terrible fire is underway at Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris," mayor Anne Hidalgo wrote on Twitter. "Firefighters are trying to control the flames ... I invite everyone to respect the security perimeter."

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Politicians from across the world tweeted their condolences and support to the French people, while Twitter users shared their memories of visiting Notre Dame in response to the blaze.

Read more: Notre Dame fire: Social media users and politicians express solidarity with Parisians

Read more: Saints take to the skies from Paris' Notre Dame cathedral

What relics were saved from the fire?

A centuries-old crown of thorns made from reeds and gold, as well as the tunic worn by Saint Louis, a 13th-century king of France (Louis IX), were saved, Notre-Dame's top administrative cleric, Monsignor Patrick Chauvet said.

Firefighters had struggled to take down some of the large paintings in time, he added.

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French President Emmanuel Macron cancelled a planned 8 pm CEST address to the nation on the "Gilets Jaunes" (yellow vests) movement due to the "terrible fire", said an official at the president's Elysee office.

Here's how events unfolded on Monday

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