Overview
- Emergency stabilization is in its final stretch, with shoring, debris removal and temporary roof protections largely completed as teams clean and assess affected chapels and vaults.
- A first technical meeting between the Cabildo, the Junta and the city is scheduled for Wednesday to launch drafting of the restoration plan, which they aim to submit to the Provincial Heritage Commission in late September or early October.
- Authorities project full rehabilitation of the damaged areas around mid-2026, a timeline contingent on approvals and the detailed project schedule.
- The cause remains under forensic investigation, with an electrical fault in a stored floor sweeper cited as the leading hypothesis while Policía Científica finalizes its report.
- The Cabildo has committed to cover the costs, no final budget has been published and the culture chief has cited a rough figure of about one million euros, with the plan set to reopen the Puerta de San Nicolás for public access rather than storage.