November 23, 2024

In Venice Floods, Tourists Frolic as Locals Fear for 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. Mark’s 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, Venice’s 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 city’s treasures.

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Brushing away floodwater outside the historic Caffe Florian on Tuesday.CreditAndrea Merola/ANSA, via Associated Press

“Here it’s solid,” said Pierpaolo Campostrini, a member of the board responsible for managing St. Mark’s Basilica, as he knocked on the marble facade of the structure, as if listening for a secret passageway, “But here it’s 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 week’s flood, would reveal itself only over time.

The building’s 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.

The water had already taken its toll on the marble columns, brought from Byzantium centuries ago. Mr. Campostrini pointed at one base, now a corroded green crumble next to an empty cup of pink strawberry gelato.

“It’s not just global warming,” he said. “But the episodes are more severe and long.”

After about 1,000 years, Venice is imperiled by its sinking foundations and rising waters as well as the hordes of tourists arriving on cruise ships and low-cost flights. They clog the narrow streets and have pushed out residents in favor of Airbnb apartments.

Flooding, though, is the existential danger.

Earlier this week, for only the fifth recorded time in St. Mark’s nine-century history, the water reached the marble floor inside, submerging the area around the altar of the Madonna Nicopeia.

On Wednesday, the floor was dry but a yellow sign reading “Attention: Wet Pavement” stood ready by the entrance. Outside, though, the water still filled St. Mark’s Square. As tourists climbed the steep steps to the basilica’s balcony (“We saw a wedding proposal!” one woman shouted), the Roman Catholic patriarch of Venice, Msgr. Francesco Moraglia, checked in on his church.

Earlier in the week, he had rushed to visit when he heard the water had breached the door.

“I said a prayer and gave a blessing,” Monsignor Moraglia said, showing pictures of himself wearing galoshes. Now, he said, he was hoping for help from the multibillion-dollar Mose project, an unfinished system of floodgates that was initiated more than a decade again to block the rising waters and threats from global warming.

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The Mose project, a multibillion-dollar system of floodgates, was begun more than a decade ago to block the rising waters and threats from global warming in Venice.CreditMatteo Chinellato/IPA, via Shutterstock

He said he and the city’s leaders had a “mission to defend the basilica not just from the floods” of excessive tourists and the enormous cruise ships that brought them, but also from the threats brought on by climate change.

But the two make a formidable combination.

Outside the church, traffic and road rage were in full display on the raised wooden walkways. An American woman elbowed a group of Chinese tourists who sought to cut the line.

On Thursday, high tides brought the water back all across the city, flooding the narrow streets up to people’s ankles and shins. The thumping sound of rolling luggage was replaced by the sandpaper scratching of the yellow, orange and blue plastic bags that tourists bought to cover their shoes and ankles.

For more read the full of article at The Nytimes

 

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