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Notre Dame, a Paris landmark, caught fire three years ago. The latest technology is used to rebuild the famous cathedral.
Birgit Holzer
How do I describe the horror that Gael Hammon felt when he saw flames rising over Notre Dame? As smoke billowed between the cathedral’s twin towers and out of the ceiling, the sky turned pink as night fell in Paris. The wooden crossing tower, which architect Eugène Viollet-le-Duc added in the 19th century, eventually fell, and Hamon, a skilled stone maker, was furious. “For 850 years, Notre Dame has been preserved,” he says today. My generation is responsible for burning the cathedral. I couldn’t believe it.”
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