Workers in the eastern German city of Dresden on Friday rushed to clear away chunks of a partially collapsed bridge before water levels on the Elbe river rise too far.

It comes amid major flood warnings for much of central Europe and the state of Saxony and the expectation of those floodwaters arriving in the city.

What do we know about Dresden’s Carola Bridge?

A 100-meter (330-foot) piece of the Carolabrücke bridge in Dresden in the state of Saxony collapsed and fell into the Elbe river early on Wednesday.

The bridge is a key tram, cycling and pedestrian route. However, there were no casualties as the collapse occurred at 3:08 a.m. local time.

The bridge is around 400 meters long in total and made up of three sections. The collapse came after two sections of the bridge had recently been repaired

Two blue cranes clearing away rubble from damaged Carola Bridge in Dresden, Saxony, Germany
Dresden’s Carolabrücke is 400 meters long, while a roughly 100-meter piece of it collapsed and plunged into the Elbe RiverImage: Robert Michael/dpa/picture alliance

What else do we know about the removal work?

Part of the bridge came down early on Friday during controlled demolition work, with far more of the structure compromised than what fell into the water.

Engineers had begun demolishing the damaged part of the bridge on Thursday evening.

Officials said that demolition work would be completed by Sunday evening.

The German DPA news agency cited Simone Prüfer, head of Dresden’s Road and Civil Engineering Department, as saying that the Elbe river would likely reach 4 meters by the end of the week.

Prüfer said that experts were currently calculating the effects of the expected flooding.

Two people holding umbrellas look at partially collapsed Carola Bridge in Dresden from afar
The eastern state of Saxony, where Dresden is located, is expecting continuous rainfall and floodingImage: Robert Michael/dpa/picture alliance

“We’re running out of time here. We are really fighting against the clock here,” fire service spokesman Michael Klahre said at a press conference.

The German military, known as the Bundeswehr, was also involved in the removal efforts.

Continuous rainfall is expected in eastern areas of Saxony and flood warnings have been issued for the Spree and Lausitzer Neisse rivers.

sdi/msh (AFP, dpa) 

Dresden’s collapsed bridge and the state of German infrastructure: DW’s Chiponda Chimbelu

To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video

source

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Germany: AfD disputes 'remigration' investigative report

Various figures from the German and Austrian far-right scene, including some noteworthy…

Berlin police probe alleged harassment of Israeli ambassador

Berlin police are investigating an incident in which pro-Palestinian activists allegedly harassed…

A new generation of Muslim religious leaders trained in Germany

Osman Soyer is a religious affairs officer who was sworn into office…

Red Sea: Germany's Bundestag approves naval mission

Germany’s parliament, the Bundestag, on Friday overwhelmingly approved a new mandate committing…