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When a fire broke out in Notre Dame this past spring, Paris lost more than a tourism icon—its residents also lost a gathering place for community and worship. Now Shigeru Ban wants to change that with a temporary chapel that would serve as a gathering place for religious services while the cathedral undergoes restoration.
The Pritzker-winning Japanese architect is proposing an airy pavilion designed around simple, recyclable materials. The structure is anchored by wood-paneled shipping containers that connect to paper tube columns via rope. The columns and wooden trusses support a simple white gabled roof, leaving the space open to the elements.
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French paper La Croix reports that while the structure is still not approved, it has caught the attention of Paris’ architectural set. “Can such a space, which needs to instill calm and repose, be situated right next to a construction site?” architect Patrick Bouchain commented to the paper. “Will the square, which stands above the archaeological crypt, be able to take the weight of such a structure?”
Practicalities aside, it’s a gesture that many people see as a necessary next step, while plans for the cathedral’s restoration are debated, voted on, and hopefully—eventually—constructed.
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