More than a year since the Notre-Dame cathedral fire, authorities have decided how it will be rebuilt

President Emmanuel Macron promised after the fire to rebuild Notre-Dame within five years.
It presented architects with a once-in-a-generation opportunity.
Christophe Girard, deputy mayor for culture in Paris, said the Gothic masterpiece must be painstakingly restored to its former glory.
France's chief architect of historical sites, Philippe Villeneuve, insisted the spire be rebuilt exactly as before.
That drew a strong rebuke from the French army general, who told Mr Villeneuve in a National Assembly committee meeting to "shut his mouth".
"As for the chief architect, I have already explained that he should shut his mouth," General Jean-Louis Georgelin said to gasps of astonishment.
But after months of deliberating, the commission in charge of the decision announced on Thursday (local time) that the centuries-old cathedral will be rebuilt just as it was before.
The national heritage and architectural commission have approved plans to restore the cathedral to its last "complete, coherent and known" state, including the spire, the restoration body said in a statement.
More than a year since the Notre-Dame cathedral fire, authorities have decided how it will be rebuilt - ABC News