Paris: French lawmakers on Friday approved a law to restore the Notre Dame cathedral in five years after the 850-year-old World Heritage Site suffered serious damage in April 15 fire.
"We will rebuild Notre Dame de Paris... We will not confuse speed with haste. We must offer Notre Dame a restoration worthy of its splendour," media reported quoting French Culture Minister Franck Riester.
"At certain points, it is urgent to intervene, at others we will take the time to reflect. The current situation of Notre Dame imposes these two approaches and this law manages to reconcile them," he added.
Rebuilding the 850-year-old French gothic architecture in five years is an "ambitious timeframe," Riester said, but "we want to move quickly. Some have accused us of wanting to move too quickly but the outpouring of generosity was very fast so we can and must respond, which is what we are doing."
The law provides a legal framework for the donations to guarantee transparency. Till date, more than one billion euros (1.124 billion U.S. dollars) worth of donations have been received to restore and preserve the ancient monument and "to finance the training of professionals with the specific skills that will be required for the work," media reported.