Notre Dame: '15 or 20 years' needed for restoration after fire, rector says

Loading Video…

This browser does not support the Video element.

A look back at the Notre Dame Cathedral fire

Ever since the French landmark was engulfed in flames that destroyed much of the structure's roof and felled its spire, construction workers have toiled tirelessly to save the 13th-century relic by President Emmanuel Macron's promised five-year timeline.

The rector of Notre Dame said Friday that the burned-out Paris cathedral and its esplanade could remain a building site for another "15 or 20 years."

Rector Patrick Chauvet spoke to The Associated Press following Good Friday ceremonies, including venerating the "Crown of Thorns" at Notre Dame’s temporary liturgical base, the nearby church of Saint-Germain l’Auxerrois.

He added that: "I can guarantee that there’s work to do!"

In the days following the April 15, 2019, blaze that engulfed Paris’ Gothic gem, French President Emmanuel Macron set a five-year restoration deadline for 2024, when Paris is to host the Summer Olympics. But French officials quickly backpedaled Macron's statement, conceding that it was unrealistic to complete the enormous project by that time.

Loading Video…

This browser does not support the Video element.

Notre Dame to miss first Christmas in centuries

The Paris cathedral will not celebrate Midnight Mass this year for the first time in more than two centuries.

The blaze also distributed vast amounts of toxic lead from the cathedral's burned-out roof onto the site and nearby, complicating the clean-up work that came before restoration efforts could even begin.

Works planned include remodeling the cathedral’s esplanade, which before the blaze was visited every year by 20 million tourists.

RELATED: Year after Notre Dame fire, restoration stalled by coronavirus