Jump to content

Recommended Posts

I have wanted to visit this beautiful cathedral for years, been to Paris a few times and never felt like joining the long queues. How I wish I had now. It appears we are witnessing some iconic history going up in smoke before our eyes. It makes me so incredibly sad to see this. I hope they can save as much as possible.


Louisa.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/223359-notre-dame-cathedral/
Share on other sites

Very shocking to see the photos and footage. Beautiful cathedral.


Papers reporting that Macron has pledged to restore the cathedral and a French billionaire has pledged E100 million towards the restoration.


Hopefully it will be like the Basilica at Assisi after the earthquake in 1997 and it will be restored to its former glory.

It's incredibly sad but also positive that so much of the structure has been saved and there will be a renewed focus on proper restoration (the current restoration works having been held up for years).


The damage doesn't sound much worse than happened following the York Minster fire in the 80s (but on a bigger footprint) and the restoration there has been incredible. Sure the same will happen in Paris now.

From various News programs it was stated that the original Timber roof used 1,200 mature Oak trees.


The timbers are hidden and it is likely a replacement roof would be a steel construction complying

with modern building regulations.


Hopefully not another 1,200 trees.


DulwichFox

DulwichFox Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> From various News programs it was stated that the

> original Timber roof used 1,200 mature Oak trees.

>

> The timbers are hidden and it is likely a

> replacement roof would be a steel construction

> complying

> with modern building regulations.

>

> Hopefully not another 1,200 trees.

>

> DulwichFox


York Minster can be a template on a smaller scale I guess


They appear to have used timber.


https://news.sky.com/story/york-minster-shows-how-cathedrals-can-be-restored-after-fires-11695738

I saw a great thing online about how, when they replaced the timber in the cathedral 160 years ago, they planted enough oak trees at Versailles replace those trees and to be able to do it again the next time it was needed. Whether these will be mature enough yet I don't know but amazing forethought in supposedly less enlightened times.

edcam Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I saw a great thing online about how, when they

> replaced the timber in the cathedral 160 years

> ago, they planted enough oak trees at Versailles

> replace those trees and to be able to do it again

> the next time it was needed. Whether these will

> be mature enough yet I don't know but amazing

> forethought in supposedly less enlightened times.


Alas, this doesn't appear to be true...

edcam Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I saw a great thing online about how, when they

> replaced the timber in the cathedral 160 years

> ago, they planted enough oak trees at Versailles

> replace those trees and to be able to do it again

> the next time it was needed. Whether these will

> be mature enough yet I don't know but amazing

> forethought in supposedly less enlightened times.


Not sure if the text is true or false - but every photo on those tweets seems fake (they're Norwegian pines etc) .


Even if true would Versailles give up those trees :)

DulwichFox Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Oak natural history and ancient wisdom:

> Oak trees can live up to 1000 years old but are

> generally mature at 75, and live on average

> 150-250 years.



Strangely my sisters and I planted some horse chestnut saplings back in 1977 back in Gower to celebrate the silver jubilee and they still look like young trees (no where near fully grown)

From my niece who works in a hospital in Africa:

?


?If two men in a world of more than 7 billion people can provide ?300million to restore Notre Dame, within six hours, then there is enough money in the world to feed every mouth, shelter every family and educate every child. The failure to do so is a matter of will, and a matter of system.


The failure to do so comes from our failure to recognise the mundane emergencies that claims lives all around us every single day. Works of art and architectural history and beauty rely on the ingenuity of people, and it is people who must be protected above all else.


Brick and mortar and stained-glass might burn, but they do not bleed, and they do not starve, and they do not suffer. Humans suffer. Everywhere in the world, from Paris to Persepolis, people are suffering. But their suffering is every day. It does not light up a front page, and it does not inspire immediate donations from the world's wealthiest men.?

YES,

I like your comments



Chick Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> From my niece who works in a hospital in Africa:

> ?

>

> ?If two men in a world of more than 7 billion

> people can provide ?300million to restore Notre

> Dame, within six hours, then there is enough money

> in the world to feed every mouth, shelter every

> family and educate every child. The failure to do

> so is a matter of will, and a matter of system.

>

> The failure to do so comes from our failure to

> recognise the mundane emergencies that claims

> lives all around us every single day. Works of art

> and architectural history and beauty rely on the

> ingenuity of people, and it is people who must be

> protected above all else.

>

> Brick and mortar and stained-glass might burn, but

> they do not bleed, and they do not starve, and

> they do not suffer. Humans suffer. Everywhere in

> the world, from Paris to Persepolis, people are

> suffering. But their suffering is every day. It

> does not light up a front page, and it does not

> inspire immediate donations from the world's

> wealthiest men.?

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • wanted lego my child is collecting lego if you have any for sale please let me know
    • I'd actually go the whole hog and do a fondue, we all remember them fondly from parties in the last century or trips to Switzerland.  As long as it is cheese, not chocolate, urghhh
    • Gosh, that all sounds so familiar!  Southwark are constantly holding up their Outdoor Events Policy as proof of process, but then constantly allow exceptions when things aren't quite done correctly. Point in case, Gala's licence application - extract from the Consultation Findings Report - "The GALA team formally submitted their application to hold GALA 2025 to the council on the 7 October 2024. It is usually a requirement that applications for larger scale events are submitted with a minimum of 9 months to process them, but discretion can be applied if there are mitigating circumstances. 8.4 of the Outdoor Events Policy clarifies that processing applications received outside the stated lead-in times is at the Council's discretion. In this case: • The council were aware that Assembled Gala were preparing an application for the event to take place in 2025 in advance of their submission date, with operational discussions already taking place • GALA festival has been taking place in Peckham Rye Park since 2018 – less time is needed regarding event planning than if it were a new event • The GALA team already have a Premises Licence in place for this event (this is a pre- requisite for the Event Licence to be issued), so no time needed to be factored in for a premises licence application and decision-making process" So despite the fact that there would need to be major planning decisions due to the change of site access, they didn't think Gala needed to adhere to the same rules as everyone else? Makes me wonder what other rules they are exempted from... On a similar note, has anyone received a Resident Communication letter, containing the contact details for issues? We haven't, and we live directly opposite the site on Colyton Rd. They were supposedly distributed on 29/4...
    • We find that just adding your own favourites is the best way - everyone likes different things and your guests will likely be happy enough
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...