Imported from Gimli Manitoba. None of that putrid Scotch stuff.Whiskey made perhaps from holy water?
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Imported from Gimli Manitoba. None of that putrid Scotch stuff.Whiskey made perhaps from holy water?
Refresh and live with the times. Ask people what the want today.I like historical monstrosities.
To level & replace it smacks of Talibanism.
When your cathedral burns down, rebuild it how you like.Or it smacks of the thoughts of Renaissance and Baroque Italian architects who saw the Gothic as "Germanic and barbarous".
Italians, even Catholics, frown upon Gothic architecture. I don't know why the French even embraced it historically.
I find the Romanesque even more eye-pleasing with it's tall rounded, castle-turret-like towers and rounded arches.
The St. Peter's Basilica of the Vatican in Rome is much more bright and cheery: a rival of the Classical of Roman and Greek antiquity.
From the Renaissance through the Enlightenment, much of Gothic architecture was phased out and western European cathedrals were replaced or some Gothic buildings were given a facelift to reflect newer ages.
I'm sure they'll do what they want.Refresh and live with the times. Ask people what the want today.
I agree.If it's going to be remade, I think it should follow the original in aesthetic as far as feasible. It will take a very long time until it's done though.
Well said.I'm sure they'll do what they want.
But it's my job on RF to advise others what to do.
All I need is the power to make it a command.
Should Notre Dame be restored with true faith to the original?
Should steel beams replace the original timbers?
Should this cold, dark medieval Gothic monstrosity be leveled altogether and replaced with something more enlightened in architecture in the form of the Renaissance as St. Peter's Basilica, The Queen of Catholic Churches? How about beautiful, white light and cheerful Baroque architecture as St. Stephen's Cathedral in Passau, Lower Bavaria, Germany designed, decorated and painted with frescoes by three collective Baroque Period Italians and also housing the largest pipe organ in Europe?
St. Stephen's Cathedral, Passau - Wikipedia
It will be restored wood timbers as original with reinforcing. I support the restoration for historical reasons not religious.
Exceptions can be made for a good cause.Suitable wood is not available in europe, .it is in canada ans russia but i understand that felling primal forest is s no, no.
Exceptions can be made for a good cause.
Do not surrender to structural steel !!!!
But engineered lumber could be just fine.
I agree.
But some modern structures are also pleasing to the eye.
I'm not trying to be snarky, but what business is it of yours? If someone wants to donate to a legal cause, why stop them?With most of the funding coming from the Church. Billionaires donating is great and everything but the Church should really pay at least half.
Should Notre Dame be restored with true faith to the original?
Should steel beams replace the original timbers?
Should this cold, dark medieval Gothic monstrosity be leveled altogether and replaced with something more enlightened in architecture in the form of the Renaissance as St. Peter's Basilica, The Queen of Catholic Churches? How about beautiful, white light and cheerful Baroque architecture as St. Stephen's Cathedral in Passau, Lower Bavaria, Germany designed, decorated and painted with frescoes by three collective Baroque Period Italians and also housing the largest pipe organ in Europe?
St. Stephen's Cathedral, Passau - Wikipedia
Keeping in the spirit of the post...the Chinese newspaper building.Should Notre Dame be restored with true faith to the original?
Should steel beams replace the original timbers?
Should this cold, dark medieval Gothic monstrosity be leveled altogether and replaced with something more enlightened in architecture in the form of the Renaissance as St. Peter's Basilica, The Queen of Catholic Churches? How about beautiful, white light and cheerful Baroque architecture as St. Stephen's Cathedral in Passau, Lower Bavaria, Germany designed, decorated and painted with frescoes by three collective Baroque Period Italians and also housing the largest pipe organ in Europe?
St. Stephen's Cathedral, Passau - Wikipedia