France | Huge oak beams are brought to Notre Dame for the reconstruction of its roof

France | Huge oak beams are brought to Notre Dame for the reconstruction of its roof

A crane lifted massive oak beams from a barge to Notre Dame Cathedral, in a spectacular operation to rebuild the fire-ravaged temple and bring it back to life by December 2024.

With frames weighing from 7 to 7.5 tons, a delicate operation was carried out on Tuesday that drew crowds along a bridge over the Seine River and to its banks: a crane lifted huge oak beams from a barge to the Cathedral of Notre Dame, in a spectacular operation to rebuild the fire-ravaged temple and bring it back to life by December 2024.
"I think it's a magical moment for many Parisians this morning," Transport Minister Clement Beaune said, noting that the Seine will be at the center of the Paris Olympics in 2024.
General Jean-Louis Georgelin, appointed by French President Emmanuel Macron to oversee the rebuilding of Notre Dame, said 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 Olympic Games so that it will be ready in December 2024," he said. "This is our goal."
Notre Dame, overlooking old Paris from an island in the Seine, was consumed by flames in 2019 and it was decided to rebuild it using ancient techniques.
Skilled carpenters used medieval methods to construct the beams, which measured 46 to 52 feet (14 to 16 meters) wide and 39 to 43 feet (12 to 13 meters) high.
Guided by ropes, they were placed on the ceiling around the area of the iconic spire, which crumbled to ashes during the fire, and the two arms of the transept, the wooden skeleton of Notre Dame.
A statement noted that the silhouette of Notre Dame, currently surrounded by scaffolding, will emerge on the horizon as the work progresses.


WEMHONER Surface Technologies

IT MAY INTEREST YOU

Card image cap The forest of the oldest shadows: the story of the petrified trees

One of the natural treasures of Río Negro turns 23 years old under the protection law that allows its conservation. Where it is and how it was formed. Río Negro celebrates 23 years of conservation in the petrified forest as a Protected Natural Area (ANP). It is a space of 625 hectares that protects an exceptional site of fossil trunks that date back more than 60 million years.

Read news »

Card image cap Experts cant believe it, but this tree is the oldest in the world and continues to bear fruit: it is 4,000 years old.

Nature keeps secrets that defy the passage of time, and one of the most surprising examples is a tree that, approximately 4,000 years old, continues to bear fruit today. This specimen has become a symbol of resistance and longevity, capable of surviving climate changes, landscape transformations and human activity itself.

Read news »

Card image cap The city in South America that breathes thanks to a thousand olive trees planted in the 17th century

In the heart of South America there is a city that, among the noise and concrete, still breathes thanks to an olive forest

Read news »

ASERRADERO EUZKADI

SERV-INT

PERIN Spa

EL EMPORIO DEL TERCIADO SA

CONTROL LOGIC

AUTOPERFORANTES TEL

LUAN - Ferroplastica Olivos S.R.L.

RAIES MADERAS S.A.

SAN VICENTE MADERAS SRL

HERRAJES NORTE

CORCHOLINEA

MARCELO F. CASTELLUCCIO

VIALRO

AFIPAR SH

USNR

PIERMATTEI S.A.

ALCE HERRAJES SH

GRUPO EURO

ROSARIO ABRASIVOS SRL

LYH PLACAS

JOESCAN

FRUND STARK SA