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This photograph shows a new altar (front) designed by French artist and designer Guillaume Bardet, at the Notre Dame Cathedral, in Paris. Photo by Christophe Petit Tesson/AFP via Getty Images

PHOTOS: Notre Dame Cathedral reveals its new interior 5 years after devastating fire

PARIS — After more than five years of frenetic reconstruction work, Notre Dame Cathedral showed its new self to the world Friday, with rebuilt soaring ceilings and creamy good-as-new stonework erasing somber memories of its devastating fire in 2019.

Images broadcast live of a site visit by French President Emmanuel Macron showed the inside of the iconic cathedral as worshippers might have experienced it back in medieval times, its wide, open spaces filled with bright light on a crisp and sunny winter's day that lit up the vibrant colors of the stained-glass windows.

French President Macron visits the Notre-Dame Cathedral, in Paris
French President Emmanuel Macron delivers a speech during a Nov. 29 visit to the Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris. Photo by Christophe Petit Tesson via Reuters
French President Macron visits the Notre Dame Cathedral, in Paris
A view of the stained-glass windows inside the Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris, five years after a 2019 fire ravaged the world heritage landmark and toppled its spire. Photo by Stephane de Sakutin via Reuters

Outside, the monument is still a construction site, with scaffolding and cranes. But the renovated interior — shown in its full glory Friday for the first time before the public is allowed back in on Dec. 8 — proved to be breathtaking.

Stonemasons fixed the ripped-open ceilings

Gone are the gaping holes that the blaze tore into the vaulted ceilings, leaving charred piles of debris. New stonework has been carefully pieced together to repair and fill the wounds that had left the cathedral's insides exposed to the elements. Delicate golden angels look on from the centerpiece of one of the rebuilt ceilings, seeming to fly again above the transept.

The cathedral's bright, cream-colored limestone walls look brand new, cleaned not only of dust from the fire but also of grime that had accumulated for centuries.

The cathedral attracted millions of worshippers and visitors annually before the April 15, 2019, fire forced its closure and turned the monument in the heart of Paris into a no-go zone except to artisans, architects and others mobilized for the reconstruction.

French President Macron visits the Notre Dame Cathedral, in Paris
This photograph shows part of bas-relief outside the Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris. Photo by Stephane de Sakutin via Reuters
FRANCE-POLITICS-GOVERNMENT-RELIGION-MONUMENT-HERITAGE
This photograph shows the inside of the Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris. Photo by Stephane de Sakutin via Reuters

Macron entered via the cathedral's giant and intricately carved front doors and stared up at the ceilings in wonder. He was accompanied by his wife, Brigitte, the archbishop of Paris and others.

Techniques new and old deployed

Powerful vacuum cleaners were used to first remove toxic dust released when the fire melted the cathedral's lead roofs.

Fine layers of latex were then sprayed onto the surfaces and removed a few days later, taking dirt away with them from the stones' pores, nooks and crevices. In all, 42,000 square meters of stonework were cleaned and decontaminated — an area equivalent to roughly six soccer pitches.

French President Macron visits the Notre Dame Cathedral, in Paris
A view of a statue inside the Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris. Some 250 companies and hundreds of experts were mobilized for the five-year restoration costing hundreds of millions of euros. Photo by Stephane de Sakutin via Reuters

"It feels like it was built yesterday, like it's just been born, even though Notre Dame is very old," said stonemason Adrien Willeme, who worked on the reconstruction. "Because it's been so carefully restored and cleaned, it looks really extraordinary."

Cleaning gels were also used on some walls that had been painted, removing many years of accumulated dirt and revealing their bright colors once again.

French President Macron visits the Notre Dame Cathedral, in Paris
A painting seen inside the Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris. The cathedral is set to re-open early December 2024, with a planned weekend of ceremonies on Dec. 7 and 8, 2024. Photo by Stephane de Sakutin via Reuters

Carpenters worked by hand like their medieval counterparts as they hewed giant oak beams to rebuild the roof and spire that collapsed like a flaming spear into the inferno. The beams show the marks of the carpenters' handiwork, with dents made on the woodwork by their hand axes.

Some 2,000 oak trees were felled to rebuild roof frameworks so dense and intricate that they are nicknamed "the forest."

It's a sneak peak ahead of the reopening

Macron's visit kicked off a series of events ushering in the reopening of the 12th-century Gothic masterpiece. At the end of his tour, the president addressed hundreds of workers gathered inside the cathedral and thanked them for their labors on what he called the "building site of the century."

READ MORE: Notre Dame fire wakes the world up to dangers of lead dust

"The shock of the reopening will, I want to believe, be as powerful as the one of the fire. But it will be a shock of hope," he said. "The inferno of Notre Dame was a wound for the nation. And you were its remedy."

French President Macron visits the Notre Dame Cathedral, in Paris
A view of the heart of the Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris. Photo by Stephane de Sakutin via Reuters

Macron will return on Dec. 7 to deliver another address and will attend the consecration of the new altar during a solemn Mass the following day.

Associated Press video journalist Marine Lesprit contributed to this report.

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