The team that began to focus on rescuing the collection met on September 9, 2018. There were 11 civil servants who, among other things, elaborated the preliminary protocol of actions and had the support of several institutions such as IBRAM, IPHAM, ICOM, UNESCO, etc. One of those involved, Silvia Reis, said that the process was "guided by a forensic perspective", where they tried to understand what they found and carefully collected everything in a contextualized way. For pictures of the process, see . For a summary of the rest of the process, see . On 12 September 2018, work began to implement a plan to temporarily shelter and work with what is currently the
ruins of the museum: • Wooden structures, including a metallic wall, completely surrounding the São Cristovão Palace to protect what remains of the building, • Containment measures for the building to avoid risk of
landslide, • An improvised roof to protect against rainwater, •
Modules and containers outside to serve as temporary research laboratory space. For this plan, the Brazilian government offered
R$9 million as an emergency budget which has since been received by the museum. The company, Concrejato, is contracted to reinstall the walls of the building at a cost of R$8,998,075.66. and Unesco says that the reconstruction would take 10 years to get ready. Researchers are recreating 300 parts of the collection of the National Museum, including the skull of
Luzia, with
3D printers. The studies are being resumed in a laboratory of the National Institute of Technology (INT), by master's and doctoral students of the
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro. The museum is still doing some festivals called
Museu Nacional Vive or
Museum lives to
public in
tents mounted in front of current under construction improvements to the burned headquarters, with exposition of
fossils, living snakes and
taxidermied animals like
Pterosaurs and
Armadillo among others. The museum would do a permanent
exposition outside. By some estimates, it would take R$100 million to rebuild the main dependencies. With the exception of a few metal
cabinets intact, there are only
charred fragments. Around 80% of the roof and 60% of the floors have been affected. The one million euro aid announced by Germany would allow the installation of laboratories for analysis of archaeological finds. With this figure provided by the German Federal Foreign Office the Museum's team bought, among other things, high-quality digital cameras, rangefinders to locate buried material, and hundreds of plastic boxes to transport the material. A second transfer of 145,300 euros was used to modernize the museum's electrical network. The museum director said there is a collective effort to rebuild the collection, pursue research, and plan the reconstruction of the institution housing six major graduate programs. He reported that
classes, thesis defenses and
dissertations were resumed and knowledge production did not stop. "The National Museum has lost part of its collection but has not lost the ability to create knowledge and do science," said the director. The social
anthropology library, one of the most important in Latin America and totally destroyed by the fire, has received a considerable amount of
donations, including the personal library of Rio de Janeiro researcher Gilberto Velho (1945–2012), who was dean of the Department of Anthropology of the museum until his death. Museum zoologists have already gone to the field to collect new specimens in an attempt to repopulate the
invertebrate collection, one of the richest (with 5 million copies only in the case of insects) and harder hit by the fire. Before a revamped headquarters is available, Kellner said the museum's intention is to re-display its collection – still considerable – to the public. There is a collective funding campaign to allow the institution's loan back to schools and the plan to revitalize the museum's botanical garden so that it houses a small exhibition that would receive visitors again. "It would be an illusion, even a frivolous thing, to say that the old collection will be reconstituted, but we will continue to fulfill our role," said the director. It was also informed they plan to keep part of ruins as historical exposition with a high modern structure of equipment inside. According to UFJR dean Roberto Leher, the facade and the exterior of the National Museum is to be preserved in the reconstruction works, but the building could be different. The recovery of the building will take into account a new concept of
architecture. The cost would still depend on the concept of the museum. Technicians focus are on
3D modeling and a term of reference. New materials with low-carbon, energy-less, environmentally friendly will be used because it is a science museum.
IPHAN has endorsed (since the property is overturned) to do the reconstruction taking this model into account. The new project could be with high roof space or with more
slabs, depending the approval of R$100 million or
€ 22,610,000,00 in the budget of 2019. On 7 May 2019, the museum presented 27 small pieces found of Egypt collection. The current director took the chance to ask for more money, a minimum of R$1 million to guarantee his services further. On 14 May 2019, the statue of the
Bés god about 2,350 years old was found. The piece in rock and glass paste was one of the highlights of the collection. The roof was finished on 8 June 2019, nine months after the fire. It is 23 m high sustained by 42
truss tower pillars with 30 thousand
steel bars and 147 tons of total weight. Cooperation agreement with the Italian government provides for restoration of damaged parts and long-term loan of Italian parts that would be displayed in the National Museum when it is ready for reopening. Until then, the exhibition would be installed in the Sala Roma of the Consulate General of Italy, in the Center of Rio de Janeiro. The Italian Ministry of Culture would collaborate in the restoration of a
kore, a Greek female statue found in 1853 in a tomb in Italy, which was brought by Empress Teresa of Bourbon as part of her dowry for her marriage to Emperor Pedro II of Brazil. However, the director denied to borrow pieces. Instead, he prefers money donations, which is denied by Italian and French governments. The museum reopened on 2 July 2025, while renovations are expected to be completed by the end of 2027. ==See also==