Notre Dame saved from total destruction as fire rages on

Notre Dame saved from total destruction as fire rages on, Hours after a massive fire engulfed the historic Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris on Monday, a city official said the structure of the building had been saved.
The fire at the cathedral caused the roof to collapse, destroyed a spire and spread to one of the building's two rectangular towers. The sight brought many onlookers to tears.
Those living near Notre Dame were evacuated as a safety precaution, the mayor's office said. The Paris prosecutors’ office ruled out arson and possible terror-related motives, and said it was treating it as an accident, The Associated Press reported.
"I'm devastated," Elizabeth Caille, 58, who lives in the neighborhood, said. "It's a symbol of Paris. It's a symbol of Christianity. It's a whole world that is collapsing."
Flames could be seen near scaffolding — high at the top of the famous church where $6.8 million in renovations were being done — and billowing smoke was seen from miles away in the French capital.
The spire destroyed by the fire contained artifacts considered sacred to Catholics, including a relic believed to be from Jesus Christ's crown of thorns. Relics from Saint Genevieve and Saint Denis are also feared lost.
Notre Dame saved from total destruction as fire rages on
Notre Dame saved from total destruction as fire rages on 

Michel Picaud, from the Friends of Notre Dame organization responsible for the renovation efforts at the cathedral, told NBC News that, to his knowledge, the church's organ and stained glass windows were not damaged.
"The entire roof is fully destroyed," Picaud said. "The fire started up near the roof top while another fire started in the north bell tower."
French President Emmanuel Macron gave a press conference on Monday night in Paris where he thanked the hundreds of firefighters who showed "extreme courage and professionalism" to keep the cathedral from complete destruction.
Macron said French citizens must push through their sadness about the Notre Dame fire and create hope through their pride in the cathedral and the certainty that it will be rebuilt.
"So with pride I tell you tonight that we will rebuild this cathedral, all together," Macron said. "It's part of the fate, the destiny of France, and our common project over the coming years. And I am committed to it."
The massive blaze, which started at about 6:50 p.m. local time, also spread to one of the church's landmark rectangular towers. Flames could be seen blazing behind an oblong stained-glass window in one of the towers.
At least 400 firefighters were on the scene, desperately trying to douse the flames that were destroying one of the nation's most treasured sites.
Many speculated while the fire was still raging that the cathedral would be completely lost to the flames.
Onlookers were in tears as they witnessed the flames destroying one of Paris' most famed and popular landmarks.
Notre Dame saved from total destruction as fire rages on
Notre Dame saved from total destruction as fire rages on
"A lot of people are crying," witness Carolyn Marguiles told NBC News in a phone interview moments before she spotted the roof falling. "Oh my God, it just fully collapsed!"
Another witness, Nicholas Marang, was running by the Seine River when he spotted smoke — but didn't immediately realize Notre Dame was on fire. He whipped out his phone and took footage of the spire's fall.
"It was an absolute nightmare," Marang, a 47-year-old consultant, told NBC News. "I ran to the cathedral and saw the spire of the cathedral falling."
When the spire burned down, Marang said a part of him fell as well.
"Something just collapsed inside me," he added. "One of the worst things I've ever seen."
French historian Camille Pascal told broadcaster BFM that the fire marked "the destruction of invaluable heritage."
"It's been 800 years that the cathedral watches over Paris," Pascal said. "Happy and unfortunate events for centuries have been marked by the bells of Notre Dame."
No deaths were immediately reported from the massive blaze, Paris police said.
Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the archbishop of New York, said he was praying that "God preserve this splendid house of prayer, and protect those battling the blaze."
Even President Donald Trump urged Paris firefighters to do everything they could to douse flames.
"It’s one of the great treasures of the world, the greatest artists in the world," Trump said at an economic roundtable in Minnesota. "It’s greater than almost any museum in the world and its burning very badly ... "
Glenn Corbett, an associate professor of fire science at John Jay College in New York, said there is a history of churches, synagogues and temples going up in flames during renovations — as workers use torches or welding or cutting equipment that could be sources of ignition.
"If there is a most vulnerable time for a church, it is when it is under construction because we get people who are using torches or welding or cutting that are of course emitting forces," Corbett.
Despite the massive size of the fire, a water-dropping plane could not have been used, he said.
"You couldn’t use a plane to drop water here because it’s highly unlikely you would hit the fire," Corbett said. "You would hit everything around it. I don’t see value in doing that."
The house of worship, with roots dating back to the 12th century, is considered one of the world's greatest examples of French Gothic architecture.
Construction of Notre Dame began in 1163 under the reign of King Louis VII, and the first stone was laid in the presence of Pope Alexander III.
The landmark was not considered complete until nearly 200 years later, however, with the installation of flying buttresses and a stone fence surrounding the choir and the sanctuary, according to the website for Notre Dame de Paris.
The Associated Press reported that $19 million was set aside in 1991 for a restoration project to replace loose stones on the cathedral.
Nine bronze bells were made in 2013, the church’s 850th anniversary, in order to replace deteriorating artifacts.
Sixteen copper statues were removed from the spire on Friday as part of a restoration effort that was estimated to cost more than $900,000, Agence France Presse reported.