An Italian press report said on Friday that Venice is considering a plan to raise its buildings to counter rising sea levels.
Venice is considering a plan to raise its buildings to counter rising sea levels, an Italian press report said on Friday.
Local officials and engineers have devised a way to lift buildings by about a one metre (three feet) using poles placed under the foundations to be pushed upwards using hydraulics, the daily La Stampa reported.The operation, codenamed "Rialto," would take around a month per building if each structure is raised by eight centimetres (three inches) a day.
The mayor of Venice, Massimo Cacciari, praised the plan as being "of great interest."
The main drawback of the plan is its pricetag of some 2,500 euros (3,800 dollars) per square metre.
But its advocates say the project would restore the original look of the lagoon city, which sank some 23 centimetres (nine inches) over the 20th century.
"Rialto" would be an alternative to the "Moses" project involving scores of mobile dikes to be placed at the entrance points to the lagoon.
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The lagoon city has been increasingly vulnerable to flooding, having suffered more than 50 episodes of "acqua alta" (high water) between 1993 and 2002.
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Source-AFP
SPH/L