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Restoring the World’s Most Famous Altar for the Jubille Year 2025: Bernini's Baldacchino

Almost 29 meters (95 feet) tall, weighing an estimated 63 tons, the Baldachin stands as a testament to art and history within St. Peter's Basilica. 

As was announced by Cardinal Mauro Gambetti, Archpriest of St. Peter’s Basilica, the main altar of St. Peter's Basilica and its Baldachin, Bernini’s masterpiece, will be fully restored for the Jubilee Year of 2025. 

Cardinal Gambetti said, “The Baldachin fulfills its main function in focusing the gaze and also the gesture of the faithful on Peter's tomb, on Peter's confession. It is like a large curtain that indicates a presence, through Peter's faith, the presence is Jesus who on the altar still comes to us today.” 

The Baldachin, as tall as a ten-story building, can be seen from any point in the Basilica and it represents the axis around which the entire architecture of the Basilica revolves. 

This necessary restoration is being undertaken–for the first time in a systematic and complete manner–250 years after the significant 18th-century restorations and 400 years after the start of the work on the Baldachin. 

The project will cost 768,000 US dollars and is being funded entirely by the Knights of Columbus in a spirit of service to the Church and the Pope as their Supreme Knight Patrick Kelly explains.  

“The Knights of Columbus,” Kelly said, “is primarily a charitable organization and we do so much local charity, but we're also in service to the church. So when the opportunity came up for us to collaborate on the restoration of the Baldachin, it was an easy decision to make. Precisely because it’s Bernini's Baldachin, it's the central, iconic part of the Vatican Basilica. So that's why we chose to do it. Really to be in union with the Holy See, in union with the Church.” 

St. Peter's Basilica will welcome millions of faithful and pilgrims for the 2025 Jubilee, an event that has profound value for every Christian. 

“The Jubilee,” as explained by Cardinal Gambetti, “is a door of hope to give back to every person his dignity, his original beauty, and to make each person able to live relationships with others and to live within the world, in peace.” 

The Jubilee is a unique occasion of hope and renewal for the faithful, a time also to reconnect with the Church. 

Kelly explained further the motivation for the Knights of Columbus to take on the financial expense of this restoration. “I think,” he said, “we all know we live in difficult times, but I think it’s important to be reconnected to the Church. I think it's important to renew our faith and so that's also one of the reasons why the Knights of Columbus have taken on this project because so many people will come and be inspired by the restored and refreshed baldachin.” 

The Jubilee will not be the only major event concerning St. Peter's Basilica and its canopy. In fact, in 2026, another important anniversary will be celebrated. 

Dr. Pietro Zander, Head of the Artistic Heritage Section, Fabric of St. Peter in the Vatican, explained the significance of the upcoming anniversary, “We must also see this restoration in the perspective of another great event that we will have to celebrate in the Vatican Basilica, which will not be during the Holy Year of 2025, but will be in 2026. That year marks the 400th anniversary of the dedication of the Basilica, which as is known was dedicated on November 18, 1626, by Pope Urban VIII, Barberini.” 

The provisional work and the work on the construction site will not hinder the celebration of papal ceremonies on the main altar. 

The projected time for the restoration is expected to be 10 months.   

Adapted by Jacob Stein 


Author Name

Matteo Ciofi, journalist and producer at EWTN News Nightly. He started to work in the Catholic media in 2013, with an internship in Dublin, Ireland.  

He has been working for more than five years at Salt and Light, the Canadian Catholic TV. He was in charge for the Italian Production. He worked in Canada but also in Rome as full-time correspondent, covering special events as the Synod, World Meeting of Families in Dublin and also the World Youth Day in Panama in 2019. 

Matteo Joined EWTN in May 2021 as "News Nightly" Vatican Producer.

He has two degrees from the Rome University of Tor Vergata in Humanities.  

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