Travel
Related: About this forumAs Tourists Frolic in Venice's Rising Waters, Locals Fear for the City's Treasures.
VENICE, Italy Near the Accademia Bridge, a corridor of thin trees lay horizontal, as if hit by a nuclear wind. Vaporetto tickets, pigeon feathers and candy wrappers floated in stagnant pools around St. Marks Basilica. Saltwater seeped into the private gardens and poisoned rose bushes behind stone walls.
And children sidestepped the spillover from the canals as they trick-or-treated in Venetian masks and witches hats under the Rialto Bridge.
On Wednesday, Venices lagoon subsided and revealed the damage a violent storm had wrought on the city earlier in the week, one of the worst episodes of flooding in decades. Windblown tides reaching 61 inches above sea level had submerged more than 70 percent of the city.
On Thursday the water returned again.
Some tourists frolicked in the filthy water and dined in restaurants as it lapped at the calves of their rubber boots. Locals instead worried about the saltwater eating its way through the citys treasures.
Here its solid, said Pierpaolo Campostrini, a member of the board responsible for managing St. Marks Basilica, as he knocked on the marble facade of the structure, as if listening for a secret passageway, But here its empty. We have a splitting here in the brick and the plaster. The water did this.
He explained that unlike an earthquake where you see the damage right away, the constant water infiltration, accentuated by dramatic events like this weeks flood, would reveal itself only over time.
The buildings bricks sponged the water up, and as the water rose, the danger became more acute to the 8,450 square meters, or about 91,000 square feet, of fingernail-size mosaic tiles that give the basilica its stunning golden shimmer.'>>>
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/01/world/europe/venice-flooding-tourists-tourism.html?
Crutchez_CuiBono
(7,725 posts)I hope they get those gates completed. A have a sickening feeling that the gates may be an afterthought for this historic city w climate change. Seems to be just the beginning of this kind of stuff, unfortunately.
3Hotdogs
(13,363 posts)London? Holland low lands? Venice?
Many other places like N.Y.C., Jersey City, San Francisco and Elizabeth, N.J. were build on landfill.
EX500rider
(11,432 posts)https://www.forbes.com/sites/ceciliarodriguez/2016/09/29/venice-is-fed-up-with-cruise-ships-and-angry-protesters-are-blocking-them/#1331bb583f61
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