Here’s the latest I can share based on recent reporting and reliable sources up to now.
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Sindone Chapel, also known as the Guarini Chapel, is the Baroque chapel inside Turin Cathedral (Cattedrale di San Giovanni Battista) built to house the Shroud of Turin, with Guarino Guarini as the principal designer. Recent updates emphasize its ongoing restoration history, including a fire-related setback in 1997 and subsequent conservation work, with reopening coordinated around major restoration milestones.[2][3][4]
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The Shroud itself remains stored in a controlled conservation area within Turin Cathedral and is only exhibited publicly during special expositions, with access and viewing governed by cathedral procedures and accompanying museum spaces nearby; this has been a consistent arrangement through restorations and public displays.[3]
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Public information and museum resources note that the chapel and surrounding spaces in the cathedral have undergone restorations to restore both the architecture and lighting effects that Guarini intended, including the dramatic dome and circular openings designed to frame light as a symbolic element.[1][2]
Illustration (conceptual): Guarini’s Dome and Light
- The chapel uses a dark marble palette with a circular dome above a central opening that captures and diffuses light downward, creating a theatrical sense of ascent from the earth toward the divine—the architectural idea behind the Shroud Chapel’s experience.[2]
If you’d like, I can pull in more precise dates for recent restoration milestones or provide details on public visiting hours and current display policies for Turin Cathedral and the Shroud Museum. I can also set up a quick summary of the chapel’s architectural features and how they serve the Shroud display, with citations.
Sources
On May 4th 1990, Shroud's liturgical feast, the chapel was closed, because of the falling down of some materials from the dome. To start the necessary restaurations, on February 24th 1993, Ash Wednesday, the reliquary containing the precious Linen was moved into the Cathedral, behind the high altar, where a special crystal container had been prepared; with the hope of replacing it soon in its ancient, glorious seat, not without any opportune conservative device. *BIBLIOGRAPHY*
www.sindone.infoFind all the available events at Sindone Chapel. Experience the most that Turin has to offer!
feverup.comchapel housing the Shroud of Turin
www.wikidata.orgTHE GUARINI CHAPEL In 1667 Guarino Guarini, a Theatine priest and one of the most important architects of the piedmontese baroque, was assigned the task to project and realize the chapel to keep the Holy Shroud and completed it in 1690. The project was based on the Shroud seen as the utmost evidence of the mistery of the redemption, death and resurrection of Christ. The architecture itself becomes therefore the experience to “enter death and reach the light of divine glory”. The chapel leads...
sindone.orgSindone Chapel is a baroque place of worship inside Turin Cathedral in Italy, known for its extraordinary dome. Dark marble covers the walls, while overlapping arches spiral upward and circular...
aroundus.comFind the perfect cappella della sindone stock photo, image, vector, illustration or 360 image. Available for both RF and RM licensing.
www.alamy.comHOMETHE SHROUD Welcome to sindone.orgWhat it isHistorical outlineThe fireWhere is the Shroud nowThe reliquaryThe restorationMultimedia reading of the Shroud LIFE OF FAITH The Custodian of the ShroudThe Deposition – Gospels SynopsisThe Cathedral EXPOSITIONS 200019981978197319691933193118981578 RESERVATIONS WHERE IS THE SHROUD NOW The resting place of the Shroud is within Turin Cathedral (Piazza San Giovanni), in the last chapel of the left aisle, under the Royal Tribune.Under normal...
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