Originally Posted by ChiliConCarnage:
Looks like somebodies got a case of the Mondays! TFW you're supposed to be doing construction but instead you burned down a famous historical site. Oof
Yeah, here's a photo from before the fire. If it was a construction issue, I'm not sure what kind of insurance you need to cover destroying one of your country's most famous medieval sites.
Originally Posted by Rain Man:
Yeah, here's a photo from before the fire. If it was a construction issue, I'm not sure what kind of insurance you need to cover destroying one of your country's most famous medieval sites.
Even if insurance would cover the actual damage, there's no way it could come close to covering the economic damage one. I'm confident that at least some people will change their plans to visit Paris without Notre Dame as a place they can visit. It's gonna cost millions in tourism dollars, maybe billions. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Donger:
I've never been there, but I thought that all the super valuable stuff got moved out after the French Revolution?
That happened with Versailles, but I don't know if it happened with Notre Dame. As a church-run place, I'd suspect that they avoided that fate.
I've been there, and it's got a lot of stuff in it. I have no idea of the historic importance of it, though - it was just lots of Jesuses and stuff so I didn't pay much attention.
The stained glass was impressive, and just the architecture in general. And both of those may be in trouble. At least the architecture is mostly stone. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Rain Man:
That happened with Versailles, but I don't know if it happened with Notre Dame. As a church-run place, I'd suspect that they avoided that fate.
I've been there, and it's got a lot of stuff in it. I have no idea of the historic importance of it, though - it was just lots of Jesuses and stuff so I didn't pay much attention.
The stained glass was impressive, and just the architecture in general. And both of those may be in trouble. At least the architecture is mostly stone.
I have to imagine the stained glass in the back half of the building is gone. The framing might be intact, but the glass itself would melt with that heat I bet. [Reply]