Sad news here - the building has caught fire and the spire has collapsed.
Notre-Dame, Paris
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The beautiful stained glass is what I will miss most.
How come what looked like only two fire hoses were being trained on the building? I was watching footage of warehouses alight in WW2, surrounded by dozens of fire hoses being trained on fires by firemen on high ladders. We (or they) don't seem to have progressed much in ways of fighting fires in the meantime. And how about employing planes flying overhead directing streams of water down, as happens in heathland fires?
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Richard Tarleton
Heartbreaking indeed....that spire falling, as Vincent Cronin said in his guide book (which I took to Paris with me in 1967), it took the Gothic and hammered it out like a sword....
Seems much of it is made of wood....
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostThe beautiful stained glass is what I will miss most.
How come what looked like only two fire hoses were being trained on the building? I was watching footage of warehouses alight in WW2, surrounded by dozens of fire hoses being trained on fires by firemen on high ladders. We (or they) don't seem to have progressed much in ways of fighting fires in the meantime. And how about employing planes flying overhead directing streams of water down, as happens in heathland fires?
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostIf so, that, I have to admit, would be amazing.
The now collapsed main spire dates from after the French Revolution (the original was dismantled during that revolutionary period).
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Mark Sealey sent this recent photo of the rose window. Enlarged, the details that can be seen are incredible. In the US they're saying that nothing will be saved:
It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostThe beautiful stained glass is what I will miss most.
How come what looked like only two fire hoses were being trained on the building? I was watching footage of warehouses alight in WW2, surrounded by dozens of fire hoses being trained on fires by firemen on high ladders. We (or they) don't seem to have progressed much in ways of fighting fires in the meantime. And how about employing planes flying overhead directing streams of water down, as happens in heathland fires?
There are still plenty of elemental forces we cannot control, or not very well.... jus think of all those recent forest fires in California, Australia etc....
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostOn the live Sky/BBC TV feeds (after D Trump had tweeted about such) someone commented that dropping water from above was potentially even more destructive to fragile structures, due to the sheer weight of the water...
There are still plenty of elemental forces we cannot control, or not very well.... jus think of all those recent forest fires in California, Australia etc....
I used to live less than 20 minutes walk from Norte Dame and visited often. I’m heartbroken.Steve
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