The Greek government launched a project to
restore the Parthenon and other buildings on the world heritage site in
1975, but it was not until 1983 that work started.
Scaffolding has been up somewhere around the
ancient temple ever since. But from now until September, the exterior
of the Parthenon will be scaffold-free.
Building
the Parthenon took nine years from 447 BC and the sculptural
decorations took another 10 years to complete. Restoration has already
taken longer than it took to build.
"We
treat every piece of marble like a piece of art so we have to respect
it," Mary Ioannidou, the head of restoration told Reuters during a tour
of the temple.
"The ancient Greeks
had the possibility that if a block failed, to leave it and take another
one, but we can't do it so we have to treat it with great respect."
Over the years, the Parthenon has suffered
from fire, war, revolution, looting, misguided restoration and
pollution.
It became a church for
nearly 1,000 years and served as a mosque under the Ottomans for nearly
400 years after that.
The greatest
blow to the structure though came in 1687 when a Venetian mortar ignited
the Ottoman Turkish gunpowder store inside and widespread looting
followed. British Ambassador Lord Elgin then removed large chunks of the
sculptures from 1801.
Between 1898
and 1938, restoration workers rebuilt large parts of the building and
concreted in parts of the columns and blocks that were missing. But they
used iron ties to hold the blocks together and replaced many in the
wrong place.
The iron ties have
since rusted and as they did so expanded causing cracks to appear. The
ancients also used iron ties, but coated them in lead to prevent rust.
They have lasted well.
The team of
archaeologists, marble cutters, architects, and civil and chemical
engineers, dismantled 1,852 metric tons of marble and began the
painstaking task of attempting to put it back again in the right place,
adding other fragments they found.
"It's
like a huge puzzle," said Ioannidou with a wry smile.
Titanium is now used to tie the blocks and
columns together which is highly resistant to corrosion.
New marble has been crafted to fill in some
of the gaps left by the concrete and allow blocks of the original
marble to be returned to their place on the Parthenon's stonework.
The original quarry for the marble on
Mount Penteli is now itself a protected historical site, but marble has
been cut from the other side of the same mountain.
"It's almost the same but not exactly the
same," said Ioannidou. The new marble stands out in a much lighter color
than the original.
"One of the
principles of our restoration is not to cheat the visitor. Everyone can
understand the parts that are ancient and those that are original," said
Ioannidou.
As for the color, that
will fade. "If you come here in 10 years the color will be almost the
same," she said.
In September
though, the scaffolding will be up again on the western facade and that
project will last at least another three years. Efforts to piece
together the walls of the inner chamber of the temple are already
underway.
For some, restoring the
Parthenon is their life's work. Marble-cutter Ignatius Hiou has worked
there for 18 years.
"If I could do
this until the day I die, I will be happy," he said.