No major danger to Kedarnath shrine: IIT experts

March 30, 2015 12:00 am | Updated 05:54 am IST - New Delhi:

The Himalayan shrine of Kedarnath which was marred by devastating deluge in 2013 is stable and its foundation was not damaged, an IIT expert team from Chennai has found.

The experts, who were asked by the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) to examine the condition of the foundation in wake of the floods, have also arrived at the conclusion that there was no major danger to the temple, according to ASI officials.

“The IIT Madras experts visited the temple thrice for the purpose. They have submitted their interim report that the temple is stable and there was no major danger,” an ASI official told PTI.

ASI was handed the responsibility of restoring the temple that was badly affected by the deadly floods and landslides in June of 2013 in Uttarakhand in which over 5,700 people are presumed dead by the State government.

ASI is engaged in major works including packing stones (matching the original profile and design) and providing wooden flooring within the Mandapa inside the temple, as part of the restoration works.

According to officials, non-destructive testing instruments that do not disturb the structure of the temple were used by IIT experts for assessing the health of the structure, foundation and walls.

Pointing out that a few settlements were noticed in the rocky surface of the structure, an ASI official said, such settlements were formed when the temple was constructed several centuries ago. PTI

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