The Failed Plan to Save Venice

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 24. 04. 2023
  • A $7BN flood defence system isn't enough to keep Venice afloat.
    Purchase shares in great masterpieces from artists like Pablo Picasso, Banksy, Andy Warhol, and more - www.masterworks.art/tomorrows...
    This video contains paid promotion for Masterworks. See important disclosures - masterworks.com/cd
    For more by Tomorrow's Build subscribe now - bit.ly/3vOOJ98
    Join our mailing list - bit.ly/tomorrows-build
    Listen to The World's Best Construction Podcast
    Apple - apple.co/3OssZsH
    Spotify - spoti.fi/3om1NkB
    Amazon Music - amzn.to/3znmBP4
    Follow us on Twitter - / tomorrowsbuild
    Like us on Facebook - / tomorrowsbuild
    Follow us on TikTok - / tomorrowsbuild
    Follow us on LinkedIn - / tomorrowsbuild
    Follow us on Instagram - / tomorrowsbuild
    #construction​ #architecture​ #italy
    Tomorrow's Build is owned and operated by The B1M Limited. We welcome you sharing our content to inspire others, but please be nice and play by our rules: www.theb1m.com/guidelines-for-...
    Our content may only be embedded onto third party websites by arrangement. We have established partnerships with domains to share our content and help it reach a wider audience. If you are interested in partnering with us please contact Video@TheB1M.com.
    Ripping and/or editing this video is illegal and will result in legal action.
    © 2023 The B1M Limited

Komentáře • 1,4K

  • @TomorrowsBuild
    @TomorrowsBuild  Před rokem +74

    Skip the waitlist and invest in blue-chip art for the very first time by signing up for Masterworks - www.masterworks.art/tomorrowsbuild

    • @beaumershon3066
      @beaumershon3066 Před rokem +4

      GARBAGE sponsor. Stop promoting their garbage. SCAM Alert 💥

    • @tomkrasinski938
      @tomkrasinski938 Před rokem +46

      L

    • @Sai1orJerry
      @Sai1orJerry Před rokem +62

      Sell me NFT's without calling them NFTs.

    • @lohphat
      @lohphat Před rokem +3

      Masterworks is a scam. It’s just low-tech NFTs. It’s an equity with no economic drivers or metrics based solely on speculation setting its value.

    • @ropro9817
      @ropro9817 Před rokem +42

      Masterworks sponsorship again??? 😒

  • @G.F620
    @G.F620 Před rokem +1797

    I am an engineer, I live in Venice and I do work on this project. The gates might have a lot of drawbacks, but at least they are not visible. The lagoon of Venice is practically a natural reserve, especially in the vicinity of the sea inlets: the gate project in the Rotterdam style was rejected exactly for this reason (and the inlet in Lido is almost 2 km wide, compared to the 0,4 km of the dutch project). The gates themselves are huge, they can easily withstand a tide of +3 m and need very little modification to go above this threshold. The main concerns lie with the environmental impact of their activation: firstly because they consume a lot of energy, secondly because they impact on the vital interaction of the lagoon with the Adriatic: in the worst case scenario, it is expected that by the end of the century, flooding above the 110 cm threshold will occur for 180 days per year, thus this problem needs to be carefully handled. For the concerns about the navigation and trade, an offshore port (with an underwater train connection) is being studied, an idea which could also remove all the container and cruise ships which are still allowed to enter the very shallow water of the lagoon.

    • @HenryMidfields
      @HenryMidfields Před rokem +119

      I knew the cruise ships are often allowed into the shallow waters. Considering the number of tourists in Venice, which I have heard also puts pressure on Venice's infrastructure (both physical and social), it sounds like a good idea to relocate the port outside the lagoon. Like Paris and Kyoto, Venice only became such a renowned city thanks to its residents actually living there after all...

    • @G.F620
      @G.F620 Před rokem +91

      It is always very complicated to discuss about infrastructure in Venice, not only due to the very strict environmental and architectural constraints, but also because of its complex relation with the touristic fluxes. By the way, I never got the fuss of media about Venice sinking and becoming a new Atlantis: yes, this city is doomed, but not because of climate change (we have a chance of overcoming it), but because of overtourism, which is making it absolutely uninhabitable. And this scaremongering only helps make the situation even worse.

    • @jameshetherington1
      @jameshetherington1 Před rokem +14

      ​@@G.F620 can I ask (outside of the whole cruise ships thing) what the biggest issue with tourism is? I went just before the pandemic and was blown away by the city, I would love to go again with more money but I don't want to be part of the problem

    • @elenacavazzoni6758
      @elenacavazzoni6758 Před rokem +133

      ​@@jameshetherington1
      Venice residents dropped from 175.000 in 1951 to 50.000 in 2022, amongst the reasons few of them are
      - An increased cost of living caused by tourism
      - Higher cost of housing (it's more convenient to have a short stay B&B rather than a long term tenant)
      - A decrease in quality of life (traditional shops replaced by low-quality souvenir shops)
      - Lack of spaces for the youth
      - Lack of rewarding job opportunities
      Venice is being transformed in a theme park for tourist and locals are moving to Mestre (the closest city on the mainland)

    • @EternityGroups
      @EternityGroups Před rokem +19

      There’s no way the literally just sacrificed effectiveness with aestheticd-

  • @vilestine
    @vilestine Před rokem +2152

    Am I the only one left thinking that the system is awful if you need 80 people and 2 days to turn it on? How did this ever get funded?

    • @lucadelaurentiis6907
      @lucadelaurentiis6907 Před rokem +322

      It doesn’t need 2 days to be up and running, what they meant is that the gates are on faraway islands from which the operating crew could not come back when the system is on, because of the same bad weather that required it to be activated in the first place.

    • @socalstr
      @socalstr Před rokem +91

      Welcome to the EU.

    • @AL-lh2ht
      @AL-lh2ht Před rokem +114

      @@socalstr what does germany have to do with this?

    • @kevkj
      @kevkj Před rokem +195

      As someone else said, the 2 days mentioned isn't the time it takes to turn on but rather the typical duration of a flood event. Also 80 people isn't too ridiculous when you realize it's split between 3 locations. Much like ships/boats, the crew size is probably dictated by damage control situations not normal operations.

    • @licencetoswill
      @licencetoswill Před rokem +71

      @@socalstr the netherlands would like a word.

  • @Leptospirosi
    @Leptospirosi Před rokem +707

    Another reasons why MOSE is not operated more often is that Tides and floods are essential to keep the Lagoon ecosystem alive.

    • @InteloPL
      @InteloPL Před 10 měsíci +6

      That could have been handeled differently as well.

    • @clothokaftan
      @clothokaftan Před 9 měsíci +21

      ah yes, because the local ecosystem is more valuable than centuries of architectural history and over a quarter million people.

    • @robbieaulia6462
      @robbieaulia6462 Před 9 měsíci +82

      @@clothokaftan at least they don't destroy the local marine ecosystem for some cool islands that will get flooded like in Dubai

    • @EthanThomson
      @EthanThomson Před 9 měsíci +78

      @@clothokaftan yeah, it is. you can defend the city and the people in ways that minimise impact to the ecosystem

    • @clothokaftan
      @clothokaftan Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@robbieaulia6462 touché, fair point.
      edit: on the ugly islands i mean, they're an eyesore.

  • @karellen00
    @karellen00 Před 11 měsíci +351

    Honestly as a Venetian I have to say that the Mose works pretty well. The 110 cm threshold was chosen as at that level the flood only takes a small portion of the city. The real reason it won't be turned on more often is because Venice still is a sea city, and we can't stop the traffic more often. The cost is not really a problem, that figure you have shown was while in the early days, where the "electronic" stuff was not ready and there were few compressors, so a lot of people were needed to operate it. Now it's almost finished and the operating cost came down a lot.
    As far as San Mark Basilica is concerned that is an ancient building, and unfortunately built really low on the sea level, so a different system was needed to fill the gap between the basilica flood and the activation of the mose for the whole lagoon. In any case there was already a system that protected the crypt from the water, this new system was a more drastic choice but mainly for the salt creeping trough the bricks into the wall damaging the marble and the mosaics.

    • @humantwist-offcap9514
      @humantwist-offcap9514 Před 4 měsíci +1

      Glad I got to see San Mark’s several years ago. Lovely city!

    • @altGoolam
      @altGoolam Před 4 měsíci +8

      This is CZcams. We need a little drama to keep our attention and make us take the "right" position. Thank you for your input. Most don't read it.

    • @HowManyHintsDoYouNeed
      @HowManyHintsDoYouNeed Před 2 měsíci

      Yet Mose doesn't work. What's so wrong with putting dirt on the outside of the city? Lol

    • @karellen00
      @karellen00 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@HowManyHintsDoYouNeed Why doesn't it work? It works beautifully now! Putting dirt outside the city is challenging because we still use canals to transport people and goods. I guess we can as last resort fill the whole lagoon and swap from boat to cars, but that would wipe out the whole lagoon ecosystem that there's outside the city (the lagoon is almost a national park). Also it would take out what makes the city unique, but better than completely submerged!

    • @HowManyHintsDoYouNeed
      @HowManyHintsDoYouNeed Před 2 měsíci

      @@karellen00 the lagoon where they pollute 24/7?

  • @blava3155
    @blava3155 Před rokem +556

    I love these videos when you do a follow-up to the projects that you guys covered and whether things went according to plan or not.

  • @LorenzoCanon91
    @LorenzoCanon91 Před rokem +396

    This video (partially) starts from the wrong premise that Venice is trying to block ALL high tides.
    Its objective is to block all EXCEPTIONAL high tides (over 120cm). St Mark Square is 80cm over the 0 level. So it is perfectly normal that St Mark and the lower points go underwater with below 120cm high tides.
    That said, due to subsidence and rising sea levels that will overcome Mose in 100 years or so, it is indeed correct that it is time again to raise the city level itself.
    I am confident Venice will win this new race for its survival, as it did all past ones 😉

    • @giacintoboccia9386
      @giacintoboccia9386 Před rokem +2

      And, am I the only one who thinks that the issue of subsidence alone would not have fixed the very high tides, so they actually need both?

    • @trumpisthemessiah7017
      @trumpisthemessiah7017 Před 9 měsíci +2

      You start with the wrong premise that its ok to be underwater....

    • @user-bt8xr5si9y
      @user-bt8xr5si9y Před 8 měsíci +10

      @@trumpisthemessiah7017If the parts of the city that do go underwater with normal tides are designed with this in mind, it is not wrong. Now I don't know if they are or not or if they could be slightly redesigned to make that happen but no just because something occasionally floods doesn't mean it isn't supposed to many places are designed with some occasionall flooding in mind.

    • @joshyoung1440
      @joshyoung1440 Před 4 měsíci

      ​​@@trumpisthemessiah7017 idk, Venice as a city is probably doing better than whatever podunk flyover hellhole you probably crawled out of

  • @Bortnm
    @Bortnm Před rokem +313

    It costs 0.004% of its build cost to operate. If it operated 100 times a year for 100 years it would only cost half its build cost over 100 years, it probably wont last 50. Not sure the operating cost is a real reason.

    • @palindrome.
      @palindrome. Před rokem +50

      While that might be logical, it's not how a city council/government thinks. A city council wants to know how much money to set aside for things in advance because they have to worry about reelection. In politics, it's usually much easier to justify even a monstrous one-time cost that will theoretically eventually be worth it, than to keep authorizing much smaller (but still rather large) sums of money going down the drain 80-100 times per year. That, plus closing the ports to ships = some upset businesses and private citizens, which are a city council's worst nightmare. Even if the staff needed to operate the gates were all volunteers, and even if the machines somehow ran for free, there would still be a huge incentive for the city to say "no, we can't be switching it on two or three times a week".
      (TL/DR: Bureaucracy sucks)

    • @gillesblanchard1699
      @gillesblanchard1699 Před rokem +2

      I heard that some of the money did not reach the proper service but again it could be false informations!

    • @OM-qb9lm
      @OM-qb9lm Před rokem +4

      Its income loss. 1 cruiseship

    • @henryjohnson-ville3834
      @henryjohnson-ville3834 Před rokem +10

      Dude, for sure there’s either money laundering or fraud. No way it takes $300K to raise a few barricades. 😂😂

    • @explorer47422
      @explorer47422 Před rokem

      Italy is literally world's capital for organised crime, corruption runs deep and has done since the 40s, it's literally part of the government. Are you really surprised? Just look at the Genoa bridge collapse which was purely attributed to politicians, officials and contractors pocketing the cash instead of upgrading infrastructure they KNEW was outdated and risked collapse; it was entirely preventable. Look at the Costa Concordia disaster. Italy has a massive issue like this at every level.

  • @ezezunavuriano
    @ezezunavuriano Před 11 měsíci +119

    The system Is meant to stop the biggest floods, not all floods (which always happened). The system Is also meant to permit a recyirculation of water in the laguna. The big ships are the big problem of the city because of the waves created by them, if it can block them the better. Venice is an Italian city, not an other Disneyland.

    • @trumpisthemessiah7017
      @trumpisthemessiah7017 Před 9 měsíci

      100% wrong. Salt destroys the brickwork, and the city did not go underwater in the past. So maybe you shouldn't get your information from Disneyland, and instead read an actual book kid...

    • @xaf15001
      @xaf15001 Před 8 měsíci +19

      ​@@trumpisthemessiah7017They... they said not a Disneyland. They meant that Venice isn't some paradise that sone people think it is. It is still a city and just like other cities it has its own set of issues that it can't solve without creating other issues. I don't think they're equating it to Disneyland.
      You need a lesson in English language, buddy

  • @lumoneko299
    @lumoneko299 Před rokem +175

    So how exactly is that plan of raising the whole city up by 30-35 cm supposed to work? How would they do it while preventing damage considering it's already been used in other cities?

    • @oO0Xenos0Oo
      @oO0Xenos0Oo Před rokem +43

      Some Cities are sinking due to the consumption of ground water. If you want to raise a city, just do it the other way round and pump water into the ground.

    • @thetimelapseguy8
      @thetimelapseguy8 Před rokem +79

      @@oO0Xenos0Oo Yeah, but if the ground raises unevenly, many historical landmarks will crumble...

    • @NimbleBard48
      @NimbleBard48 Před rokem +76

      ​@@thetimelapseguy8 That's where you need engineers thinking really, really hard.

    • @oO0Xenos0Oo
      @oO0Xenos0Oo Před rokem +82

      @@thetimelapseguy8 The plan is to pump the water into the sand layers in the depth of 600-800m. This will be a very slow process that takes 10 years for a 30cm increases. Thats enough time for the somewhat flexiible clay layers above to settle evenly. And i guess the process would be monitores constantly and the amount of water that is pumped into numerous holes adjusted to make sure no area is rising to fast.

    • @jtgd
      @jtgd Před rokem +20

      They pull a Chicago. You just take it and lift it over there!

  • @krislee9899
    @krislee9899 Před rokem +71

    I remember my professor warning us about this project 3 years ago. He was actually one of the first people that got contacted to give feedback to this project, he shared this idea with some colleagues from Utrecht university and they came up with the idea to pump salt water back into the ground where previously fresh drinking water had been stored but depleted over the years. Haven’t heard from him since, but I have been told that he prefers working with Oman simply cuz there are less bureaucratic problem then in Venice.

    • @Allexstrasza
      @Allexstrasza Před 7 měsíci +1

      The water moves through the ground. Pumping saltwater into the ground is not a good idea..

    • @ldnwholesale8552
      @ldnwholesale8552 Před měsícem

      I was taught in school over 50 years ago that Venice was simply not sustainable. Way too much development sinking the city. Yes it was a large issue then

  • @YY-rh7ws
    @YY-rh7ws Před rokem +21

    09:40 This was an ideal setup for a pun around sunk cost fallacies

  • @SomeKidFromBritain
    @SomeKidFromBritain Před rokem +518

    My plan;
    Step 1) Consult the Dutch.
    Step 2) Do as they say.

    • @Leon_Schuit
      @Leon_Schuit Před rokem +67

      I think you might wind up with a landlocked city then. Stops the flooding though.

    • @screamingbirdheart
      @screamingbirdheart Před rokem +68

      When I look at the design I think they already consulted the Dutch. When mose rises it looks like big blocks of Gouda cheese 🧀 😅

    • @SomeKidFromBritain
      @SomeKidFromBritain Před rokem +1

      @@MLWitteman Are you Dutch?

    • @MLWitteman
      @MLWitteman Před rokem +2

      @@SomeKidFromBritain yes, I am.

    • @SomeKidFromBritain
      @SomeKidFromBritain Před rokem +6

      @@MLWitteman I am British.

  • @italiastoria
    @italiastoria Před rokem +19

    I don't know where the video made its research: the MOSE is working according to plan, engineers knew perfectly well that St Mark square (the lowest area of the city) would flood slightly even with MOSE operating, the new barrier on St Mark square was built to remedy that. All the big tides of the last year have been prevented by MOSE and even its detractors admit it is working. Where do you get your info?

    • @askallois
      @askallois Před rokem

      Non prendertela, sono tutti ingegneri da tastiera, non conoscono il problema e chiedono di farlo fare agli olandesi. Possiamo strillare tutto il giorno che sono poco informate ma non capiranno lo stesso.

    • @NequeNon
      @NequeNon Před rokem +2

      Exactly. I don't want to defend something if it isn't worth defending, but the narratives about the MOSE project and reality are often very different. It's a terribly difficult challenge and it's more than likely that any solutions will have many drawbacks. It seems to be equally challenging in getting this message through.

  • @gillesblanchard1699
    @gillesblanchard1699 Před rokem +35

    I read somewhere a few years ago that the tourist ships were the worst destructed factor in Venise! One year not long time ago when there was drought and the ships could not go through, they could see the clear water and the fishes at the bottom!

    • @GRORGvideot
      @GRORGvideot Před 11 měsíci +11

      If I remember correctly, the clear water was because of covid: lockdowns and thus reduced tourists and travelling meant less pollution in the water

    • @bobmarshall3700
      @bobmarshall3700 Před 9 měsíci +9

      Cruise ships are an environmental, unsustainable nightmare. Polluting, consuming huge amounts of fuel, all of what should become part of the past. The people who ride on them perpetuating the problems of tourism, which is also unsustainable.
      It beats me why so many selfish people feel ENTITLED to go on a holiday once a year, particularly on kitsch cruise ships with their kitsch entertainment.
      Stay in your own home/country and spend your holidays improving/supporting your local community.

    • @Dethflash
      @Dethflash Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@bobmarshall3700 you are just buckets of fun. How dare someone work all year saving up their own money to enjoy one week of vacation. No sightseeing, don't go explore, and enjoy nature outside the cities, just work 365 days a year and never ever leave your community especially to have 'fun'.
      Cruise ships are awful though, not a great place to vacation.

  • @jiraph52
    @jiraph52 Před rokem +323

    if NL can engineer a whole country below sea level, I'm sure Venice will figure it out eventually 🙄

    • @spicychad55
      @spicychad55 Před rokem +34

      They'd have to get rid of their watery view!

    • @robbar42
      @robbar42 Před rokem +17

      I am sure SpongeBob would do a better job at soaking up the water ....I remember that this project has been going on forever (like everything else in Italy as far as I remember.) Money vanished in the pockets of "someone" , nothing done, back at square one again and much political blah blah.

    • @killiancoleman3452
      @killiancoleman3452 Před rokem +1

      @مريم قريشي Won’t work

    • @drpepper3838
      @drpepper3838 Před rokem +6

      No they aren't dutch

    • @soly-dp-colo6388
      @soly-dp-colo6388 Před rokem +3

      @Steve Sherman Well said. There are enough places available around the coastline to build a city on safer ground. They did look for trouble by building it here.

  • @jedimindtrix2142
    @jedimindtrix2142 Před 7 měsíci +10

    This is one of those situations where hindsight truly is 20/20. When the city was first built, people were not thinking about how large it could get. It isn't a great site for a large city at all. It certainly is novel and a beautiful place. No one can take that away from it. Eventually mother nature will win this battle..sadly.

  • @DragonKingGaav
    @DragonKingGaav Před rokem +10

    I've been to Venice twice and it's such a magical city! I pray we find a long term solution FAST!

  • @luigifranceschi2350
    @luigifranceschi2350 Před rokem +9

    What they are doing makes perfectly sense. When the tide is between 80 and 110 cm the only area of the city that is at risk of flood is St Marc square. That’s it.
    But if you raise the barrier too often the water in the lagoon does not get cleansed by the tide. And the lagoon would become a stinky swamp. Also,given the fact that the city wasn’t built with a sewer system. The canals are. So between 80 and 110 cm the glass barriers are the simp,e and perfect solution, and when is higher, then you need the Moses, and so the rest of the city is safe.

    • @you2ber252
      @you2ber252 Před 9 měsíci

      You got it 100% right chap. Ciao.

  • @robote7679
    @robote7679 Před rokem +2

    Fascinating, sobering video. Well made and very informative. Thanks so much for this.

  • @stevens1041
    @stevens1041 Před rokem +8

    Not mentioned here, is that Venice, the historical city, is competing with a massive port nearby. The modern port facilities are larger than Venice and their users are very powerful people, and organizations. The port would obviously like for traffic to be open at all times.

    • @1370802
      @1370802 Před 10 měsíci

      Wouldn’t that benefit Venice? Less traffic in a city whose infrastructure is overwhelmed.

  • @paulacornelison243
    @paulacornelison243 Před 11 měsíci +7

    I watched a PBS video on the subject that said the cruise ships were an environmental problem. The city was planning on stopping their entrance into Venice.

    • @bobmarshall3700
      @bobmarshall3700 Před 9 měsíci +3

      Cruise ships are an environmental, unsustainable nightmare. Polluting, consuming huge amounts of fuel, all of what should become part of the past. The people who ride on them perpetuating the problems of tourism, which is also unsustainable.
      It beats me why so many selfish people feel ENTITLED to go on a holiday once a year, particularly on kitsch cruise ships with their kitsch entertainment.
      Stay in your own home/country and spend your holidays improving/supporting your local community.

  • @felixtv272
    @felixtv272 Před rokem +12

    Man I hate those Masterwork sponsorships...

    • @fredashay
      @fredashay Před rokem +6

      Yeah, it's always the crappiest products and scams that sponsor creators -- Ray Con ear buds, Raid Shadow Legends, Manscaped, etc., etc...

  • @MatteoLazzaro
    @MatteoLazzaro Před rokem +1

    Well done, I live near Venice and you touched every point

  • @albertwang5974
    @albertwang5974 Před rokem +53

    Underwater traveling may be a bright future for Venice!

    • @TeddyKrimsony
      @TeddyKrimsony Před rokem +8

      they would need to waterproof the buildings otherwise they will crumble

    • @AngelSGG
      @AngelSGG Před rokem +1

      ​@@TeddyKrimsony it's a joke

    • @NyanyiC
      @NyanyiC Před 10 měsíci +2

      We'll be taking subs to see Venice instead of the Titanic

  • @bohdanburban5069
    @bohdanburban5069 Před rokem +7

    It's hardly surprising that structures slowly sink when built onto sediments within a lagoon in a seismic zone. Add to this the steady influx of alluvium, the deep dredging to accommodate large ships and the constant thrum of engines that only arrived on the scene less than 100 years ago. It is politically and financially much cheaper to invoke the pernicious effects of 'climate change' rather that tackling the root causes of the destruction of this magnificent city.

  • @jeepmega629
    @jeepmega629 Před 8 měsíci +4

    As an Italian I’m upset we can’t properly protect one of our most important cities

  • @ZDoko-rv7zj
    @ZDoko-rv7zj Před 7 měsíci +1

    Fighting flooding in a city built at sea level is literally fighting gravity.

  • @maggimar3118
    @maggimar3118 Před rokem +2

    As always, an excellently presented discussion of interesting issues. The state this wonderful old city has found itself in tells us everything about where the world stands, on the verge of collapse.

    • @randomobserver8168
      @randomobserver8168 Před rokem

      Maybe so, but Venice has had a very, very good and long run as maritime cities on fragile coasts go. The world is littered with ruins, places that are only museums now, abandoned places, places that grew and shrank to villages, nations and civilizations that are dust. If Venice had to choose between being a living commercial city and a museum [basically, keep the lagoon open but relocate habitation to the mainland versus seal the lagoon and end port traffic but keep the islands as a low population museum city] those would be better choices than many human places have faced in the past and will again.

  • @maxi30081998
    @maxi30081998 Před rokem +13

    Masterworks might as well just buy B1M and Tomorrow's Build at this point to save marketing $$ 😂

  • @haileybalmer9722
    @haileybalmer9722 Před 4 měsíci +3

    See, this is why it's a good idea to read the comments sometimes. I hadn't considered the environmental impact. It makes a lot of sense when you think back to the dolphins playing around in the canals during in spring 2020. That's got to be a pretty diverse ecosystem, and one Italy works to maintain, if there are dolphins, and ones that will come so close to people.

  • @CarthagoMike
    @CarthagoMike Před rokem +2

    I love to see more follow-ups on older video-projects

  • @MortenSlottHansen
    @MortenSlottHansen Před rokem +2

    such a beautiful city - hope they find the best solution...

  • @magnusturner1893
    @magnusturner1893 Před rokem +97

    If they'd designed the systems in the 2000's/10's surely there was enough information available on climate change, and if not, shouldn't they have done some studies? I mean it's a lot of money to spend on an outdated system.

    • @tigershark2328
      @tigershark2328 Před rokem +21

      5:03 it was designed in the 1980s

    • @magnusturner1893
      @magnusturner1893 Před rokem +11

      @@tigershark2328 Sorry, but that just makes it worse (the fact that they didn't do any major changes to the designs).

    • @LifeMyWay007
      @LifeMyWay007 Před rokem +30

      Because they know the problem is not climate change, it is the city continues to sink into the mud below it. The system is designed to protect from storm surges and does not address sinking at all.

    • @Bruno-P
      @Bruno-P Před rokem +22

      The system was designed in the 80s but it was considered controversial since the beginning and its construction went through a lot of postponements. The whole city of Venice is a UNESCO site, plus the lagoon is a protected marine ecosystem so it was stopped dozens of times by cultural / environmental associations. Italian slow bureaucracy and a trial for corruption also didn't help. Anyway it's not outdated, it's still not complete and at the moment it works in an "experimental mode" but it's already doing a lot for the city.

    • @heyitspete6472
      @heyitspete6472 Před rokem

      😂😂😂

  • @df1985
    @df1985 Před rokem +3

    Fascinating video, never knew the situation was this bad. Regarding pumping water to raise Venice, surely this will cause structural issues, especially in a city where buildings are so old?

  • @funny-video-YouTube-channel

    Old stone looks pretty on the island.
    They will eventually , upgrade the floaters to be more cheaper to operate.

  • @kursatkadircanli9734
    @kursatkadircanli9734 Před rokem +1

    Various solutions that come to mind to save Venice:
    1) Construction of concrete, waterproof pontoons using underwater mining techniques under buildings sitting on petrified wood foundations in Venice.
    This is a radical solution.
    The higher the sea levels rise due to global warming, the higher Venice will rise with this measure.
    However, in this option, the buildings will be disconnected from the foundation and their originality will be partially damaged in this way.
    2) Gradually raising the ground by injecting concrete under buildings and under petrified trees in Venice.
    For this process, it is possible to inject not only concrete but also deeper water.
    In this way, there will be an opportunity to temporarily save time.
    And since the buildings are not disconnected from the foundation, there will be no problem of originality.
    3) The rise in sea level will be monitored, and the flooded ground floors will be abandoned to the sea, and Venice will be used for accommodation until the 1st and, in time, the 2nd floors are also flooded.
    Perhaps, 30-40 years later, all of Venice will be under water and Venice will now be an underwater historical asset, limited to diving tourism, to watching from the surface with boats suitable for sub-pancakes.
    While Venice gradually disappears under water over time, an imitation Venice built on concrete pontoons can be built in the lagoon, similar to the first option suitable for the Venice concept.
    And in this way, the Venetian spirit is somehow kept alive.
    In the final analysis, I am absolutely certain of that.
    Venice will be largely submerged before the end of the century.
    Historical buildings and everything in them will be destroyed due to the damage of salt water.
    If no recovery work is done.
    I am in favor of the first solution that is difficult, expensive and requires technological innovations.
    I want Venice to be a floating city that will exist for centuries to come, and most importantly, a living city.

  • @deadsinner2004
    @deadsinner2004 Před 10 měsíci +9

    I bet those huge cruise ships contribute to the underwater erosion of the foundations . I have seen many of them in Venice right up close to San Marco. The displacement they cause is massive. Good idea about an offshore port with an underwater connection

    • @1370802
      @1370802 Před 10 měsíci

      Even easier they could have an offshore port with smaller ferries transporting people to Venice. Small enough to use the canals. It would be a lot cheaper than building a train track.

  • @dcallan812
    @dcallan812 Před rokem +7

    It would be interesting to see you do a video on my favourite hotel in Venice. The close for almost 2 years and renovated the building, but also added flood defences to stop the ground floor flooding. The Gritty Palace is not far from St Marks but is very discrete and off the main drag. great video 2x👍

  • @drewthompson7457
    @drewthompson7457 Před rokem +36

    Years ago, I read an article about Venice, in their wisdom, pumping water out of a fresh water aquifer under the city, causing it to sink. This happened in the 60s, if I remember the article correctly.
    Anybody else hear of such a thing?

    • @colincopland3665
      @colincopland3665 Před rokem +6

      Ironically, the ancient Roman technique of building an aqueduct from the nearby Dolomites would’ve benefited Venice more than the modern solution of pumping water from the aquifer under the city.

    • @valeriocugia3956
      @valeriocugia3956 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Yes, it was partially the fault of the industries at Marghera, just in front of Venice, who took a lot of that fresh underground water. However, the North Adriatic plate is slowly going down at a rate of 2 millimetres per year. And add the sea levels that are rising... The only solution in the long term is to pump the city up.

    • @lcfflc3887
      @lcfflc3887 Před 11 měsíci

      this would make sense, they fucked up.

    • @trumpisthemessiah7017
      @trumpisthemessiah7017 Před 9 měsíci

      @@colincopland3665 modern? wells are modern now? ok...

    • @trumpisthemessiah7017
      @trumpisthemessiah7017 Před 9 měsíci

      @@lcfflc3887 yeah! how DARE they drink water!
      jfc is there anything at all in your head?

  • @CryptidsRoost
    @CryptidsRoost Před 9 měsíci +10

    According to another documentary I watched about this issue is also down to the cruise ships. Venice is not really an ideal location for cruise ships. Not only that but many of the tourists that alight the ships cause a helluva lot more foot traffic, and many of the tourists don't even purchase that much overall from the city

  • @GazMoby
    @GazMoby Před rokem +15

    Very enjoyable as usual 👍

  • @index3562
    @index3562 Před rokem +30

    If there wasn't an essential container port in that lagun I would suggest just sealing it up so it would become a lake, then pumping out water slowly so the city would always be over water. Just an idea though

    • @tjibbeettema8759
      @tjibbeettema8759 Před rokem +9

      Yeah, the long therm solution is to dam the openings in the lagoon barrier and put a big ass lock somewhere.

    • @marcosv.ribeiro1073
      @marcosv.ribeiro1073 Před rokem +9

      ​@@tjibbeettema8759or maybe 3 locks, but I think closing it up would make the lagoon a big dead body of water, too salty, too polluted, and very very still, as of today no rivers flow into it anymore.

    • @TheViettan28
      @TheViettan28 Před rokem +5

      Just build a port out of the lagoon. And build roads/train to connect it to the city center.

    • @DurantImboden
      @DurantImboden Před rokem +2

      First, Venice would need to install a modern sewage system, since the tides would no longer flush raw sewage into the Adriatic.
      Second, just closing the lagoon's openings wouldn't necessarily keep the sea out as the Adriatic's levels continued to rise.

    • @index3562
      @index3562 Před rokem +1

      @@DurantImboden The lagoon has seawall made to protect from rising sea levels. So closing up the 3 enterences with more seawalls should hinder the water to come in the next 50 years. If they pump out the water of the lagoon they can make a proper suage system under the canals, however it wouldn't be cheap. The salt water also damages the city building so reverting one of the original rivers back to the lagoon so it can be closed and opened depending on the water lever would be great.

  • @wednes3day
    @wednes3day Před 10 měsíci

    Those glass walls sounds great in combination with the barriers 🥰

  • @R.-.
    @R.-. Před rokem +18

    Would it have been cheaper to build a sea wall plus some locks?
    Cruise ships could dock outside the sea defences if there was a rapid mass transit to transport visitors into the city.

    • @jonlivesinasia
      @jonlivesinasia Před rokem +4

      Exactly right. They must give up the cruise liners to survive.

    • @MondayMornings
      @MondayMornings Před rokem

      there are also environmental reasons, water needs to flow continuously for the lagoon ecosystem to work. the Netherland, as an example, are virtually a lake. Venice is not.

    • @chtonios
      @chtonios Před rokem

      @@MondayMornings Check Oosterscheldekering. It's a massivee stormsurge barrier that closes off an inlet where under normal weather conditions water flows freely in and out. Built with consideration of those environmental reasons.
      Or Maeslantkering, which closes off a river (that also happens to be one of the world's busiest inland shipping lanes)

  • @davidheckt3398
    @davidheckt3398 Před rokem +3

    One reason gates are not raised that's not mentioned. The cities sewer system flushes directly into the Canals. Tides are essential to flush the wast out to sea and keep the harbor ECO system healthy..

  • @samturton79
    @samturton79 Před rokem +32

    Why don't they seal the lagoon and have one narrower entry/exit that is a giant lock that can group vessels several at a time to let them in and out, like the Panama canal?

    • @MTTT1234
      @MTTT1234 Před rokem +30

      Cause the water in the shut-off lagoon would get stagnant pretty fast. Also it would stil fill up, as there are some smaller rivers stil bringing in water. So you'd have to have an artificial system of pumps and pipes rotating the water from the lagoon into the sea and back. You can miagine how much energy that would consume, having pumps pumping water back and forth 24/7 .

    • @coenlammerts8816
      @coenlammerts8816 Před rokem +1

      @@MTTT1234 i mean yeay but better than the city becoming the new atlantis

    • @critical_always
      @critical_always Před rokem +10

      ​@@MTTT1234have a look how the Dutch dealt with much more severe conditions in their Delta works project.
      You don't need pumps. You use low tide to let water out.
      But you are correct. Closing it off even a little will cause silting up of the lagoon.
      That's probably happening now already.

    • @Maurazio
      @Maurazio Před rokem +2

      @@critical_always also there is much less tide if any in the mediterranean vs the netherlands which is more oceanic. I think ecological impact would be huge and is not just about the city but the surrounding nature as well.

  • @oatlord
    @oatlord Před 10 měsíci +1

    Only a matter of time before i watch Established Titles videos about this Masterworks deal.

  • @patrickdoyle9369
    @patrickdoyle9369 Před 2 dny +1

    IT IS NOT SINKING,, THIS IS WHY EDUCATION IS SO IMPORTANT.. Water levels are rising..

  • @NequeNon
    @NequeNon Před rokem +8

    It is a little irritating to see how many (even experts in their specific fields) fail to appreciate the multidisciplinary nature of the challenge and the risks associated with ANY decision, even the most carefully thought-out. Making references to other places in the world that have to negotiate sea level changes (which can occur for may different reasons) but that have drastically different conditions only gets you so far...Venice has unique challenges and will require uniquely tailored solutions. Now that the MOSE is in operation, it's just false that it's a simply a failure. It's working as expected for the most part. Yes, we all know about the Netherlands, but this is not the Netherlands an thankfully enough people in Venice and Rome understood that.

  • @AuroraSilverFox
    @AuroraSilverFox Před 8 měsíci +4

    They gotta ask The Neatherlands for tips. Their flood engineering and planning is top notch 💕

    • @davidanalyst671
      @davidanalyst671 Před 8 měsíci

      your mom makes it flood every time she calls me

  • @atholmullen
    @atholmullen Před 8 měsíci +1

    Last I heard, they were still drawing fresh water out of the underground void.
    Installing a desalination plant so that they can stop drawing water out, and pumping a mixture of solid fill (eg sand) and fresh water back in would make far more sense. If the raft theory is right, it may be possible to raise the ground considerably further than 35cm, if it was done gradually over a long period of time.

  • @TurnRacing
    @TurnRacing Před rokem +1

    building a big gate and then not being able to use it because it's too expensive to operate is just the pinnacle of incompetence bravo

  • @bartonseagrave9605
    @bartonseagrave9605 Před rokem +5

    I would have thought that the cost of operating the barriers would easily be covered by the profits made by local businesses and their exorbitant prices to the tourists.

    • @1370802
      @1370802 Před 10 měsíci

      Yeah…. All at the cost of the locals. Those overly priced products do not benefit people who just want to feed their families. They can’t afford to live in their own city.

    • @bbgun061
      @bbgun061 Před 9 měsíci

      Well yeah, taxes paid for the barrier. Just like all government projects.

  • @tiagoprado7001
    @tiagoprado7001 Před rokem +4

    I wonder if it wouldn't be possible to do an IJsselmeer on the whole lagoon? That seems like a much more sensible option than risking structural damage on the entire city by raising it up.

  • @donaldmarwitz2046
    @donaldmarwitz2046 Před rokem +1

    It needs alot of continuous upkeep, special paints , sand blast, salt water is real harsh on the comonents. Then I think it needs regular greasing and swaping old grease out.

  • @stevet5473
    @stevet5473 Před rokem +1

    Love your videos

  • @DeGoya
    @DeGoya Před rokem +13

    I'm proud to say, that I visited this beautiful city before it'll be sunken

  • @mmsmits2868
    @mmsmits2868 Před rokem +8

    Great video. Best solution? 1. Remove all bureaucrats from the project. 2. Put engineers and contractors together in the same room. 3. Have it built by the Dutch.

  • @thefrub
    @thefrub Před rokem +1

    Pull up the historical paving stones, dump in a few hundred truckloads of a lighter stone like shale that won't cause too much settling, reset the paving stones a meter higher. The individual buildings can be jacked up.

  • @donovanphillips4973
    @donovanphillips4973 Před rokem

    Thank you

  • @skyscraperfan
    @skyscraperfan Před rokem +7

    There actually is an even more ambitious plan to build a damn across the Strait of Gibraltar, which would make it possible to lower the level of the whole Mediterranean. The problem with that is that all countries along the Mediterranean would have to agree about the new sea level of the Mediterranean and the connected Back Sea. That's countries from Spain to Russia and from Morocco to Israel.

    • @adamcheklat7387
      @adamcheklat7387 Před rokem

      Atlantropa? I’ve heard of it.

    • @MDP1702
      @MDP1702 Před rokem +3

      That is an old proposed plan that currently no-one has even an interest in looking into. It's disadvantage outweigh its advantages by a massive amount.

    • @adamcheklat7387
      @adamcheklat7387 Před rokem

      @@MDP1702 There’s even a book called The Atlantropa Articles.

    • @MDP1702
      @MDP1702 Před rokem +2

      @@adamcheklat7387 I know it is a thing, but not one seriously considered by any government.

    • @adamcheklat7387
      @adamcheklat7387 Před rokem +2

      @@MDP1702 It’s more of an alt-history novel in which the project was made. And the aftermath is not pretty.

  • @tiagoalfredo9998
    @tiagoalfredo9998 Před rokem +5

    Also the ecosystem of the lagoon can not survive if the barriers are closed, because stop the exchange of water between the lagoon and the sea.

    • @pgtmr2713
      @pgtmr2713 Před 8 měsíci

      Is it for the people or the critters? If it's for the critters let it sink. If it's for people then do what the people want to save it for generations.

  • @Gremlack13
    @Gremlack13 Před 10 měsíci +2

    I was in Venice in 2017. There was some flooding in st.mark’s square. There was a smalll plank to walk along as there was some water in the square.
    It was a gorgeous town, but very derivative. The same five types of shops repeated.
    Had the best pizza in Italy, the best spaghetti carbonara I’ve ever had, and and amazing gondola ride.
    It’s an amazing city that I would forever recommend a visit.

  • @Rias-Gremory-a-gamer
    @Rias-Gremory-a-gamer Před rokem +2

    Hi this maybe a stupid quest but with another video of your's they pumped concrete into the walls of a tunnel to strengthen it. Now her is my quest the raising with water may work but what about swapping the water for compressed concrete. It could push the land up with it push any water down the away and harden the ground making it much more stable.

  • @noahgeerdink5144
    @noahgeerdink5144 Před rokem +43

    Close off the lagoon permenatly, make the locks bigger so they can accomadte fishingboats and build a port outside the lagoon connected by metro or train to the city center to accommodate the cruise ships. This solution will also make the city a bit less popular, so they fix their over tourist problem aswell.

    • @harperwelch5147
      @harperwelch5147 Před rokem +31

      They can’t shut the lagoon off completely due to the stagnant water that would result. The fishing would evaporate and water would stink. They don’t have a sewage system so that complicates things too. They need to be able to flush the city.

    • @lonestarr1490
      @lonestarr1490 Před rokem +6

      @@harperwelch5147 The smell would be abysmal.

    • @beppihappy836
      @beppihappy836 Před rokem +10

      @@harperwelch5147 also the ecosystem lives with the water refreshing every time the tide lowers, the natural islands called barene that protects the city also from flooding are reducing in size due to altered water flow and rivers that used to flow into the lagoon were deviated outside. You can't close off the lagoon for every high tide, the system is designed only for the exceptional high tides that occure a couple of days at year

  • @Larsbor
    @Larsbor Před 11 měsíci +5

    I thought they had problems with too many tourists.. and wanted to charge people to go in and see the city… So I really dont get it why big cruiseships cannot go somewhere else and people can take the train or get to Venice by smaller boat .. I would just seal of the lagoon and make special channels for fishingboats.. industrial can go on smaller transportboats… They need to listen to some Dutch engineers !

    • @Peleski
      @Peleski Před měsícem

      It would make sense, though I don't know that there's sufficient cruise docking along the coast. Venice is the famous ship port for the region.

  • @jediknight73
    @jediknight73 Před 7 měsíci

    What a unique beautiful city 😮

  • @jlfilip
    @jlfilip Před rokem +2

    Simple thing sometimes are best ones, like WALLS. Close the city and make 2 gates that can lower sea lvl between them for ships!!!
    At the end it would cost less and do better job then it does now!!! They can even take entrance fee for ships, for maintenance of wall!!
    Make fancy walls that fits the Venice and you can add another thing on tourist attraction!!! ITS THAT SIMPLE 🙃

  • @MichaelDavis-cy4ok
    @MichaelDavis-cy4ok Před rokem +8

    Maybe Venice should consider engineering a new harbor outside of their barrier islands, then lowering the water level on the inside as the city continues to sink. It would probably be a lot simpler and cheaper than doing what they've been doing.

    • @1370802
      @1370802 Před 10 měsíci +1

      According to other comments, that would have a huge environmental impact on the lagoon. If the ships can’t get past the barrier, then neither can the fish. The entire ecosystem would die. Also, other commenters have said the periodic floods themselves are also needed for wildlife.

  • @billdexhart5179
    @billdexhart5179 Před rokem +7

    Can you do a video on the engineering that it would take to "raise" Venice? I'm trying to understand how that would work.

    • @1370802
      @1370802 Před 10 měsíci

      My guess is that they’d just bury pipes and connect them to pumps that send water down.

  • @DJAlexParker
    @DJAlexParker Před 2 měsíci

    I have no idea why, but I haven't seen this channel before but knew exactly what the voiceover would sound like 🤣 awesome as b1m :)

  • @clothokaftan
    @clothokaftan Před 9 měsíci +2

    you'd think they would devise a system that can dump all of this floodwater out of the city efficiently like the underground flood control system of tokyo does today, some of the chambers in that system are so massive it could house a small city inside it. no matter how soft the foundation level of the city is, eventually you'll hit bedrock. which will be the perfect depth to build such a system, it wont be intrusive on the "aesthetic" that the city seems to care more about than their own lives at this point.
    also i have to ask, why the fudge is a 7 Billion USD floodgate system still requiring 80 people to manually raise the gates when we are in the age of full automation? there are flood control systems now that barely need anyone on site for standard operations and only need to be there for the routine maintenance. why is this incredibly expensive system already so unbelievably outdated?

  • @procatprocat9647
    @procatprocat9647 Před rokem +3

    Knowing when to turn off the life support system is key. Usually its much sooner than it acually happens.
    Maybe the time is near.

  • @harperwelch5147
    @harperwelch5147 Před rokem +3

    I’m confused. They decided large ocean liners are not to be allowed due to their wake. The barrier has been working. So how many times has it failed to work?

    • @baronvonjo1929
      @baronvonjo1929 Před rokem

      There is literally only one ocean liner left still sailing the oceans. Do you mean cruise ships and cargo ships?

  • @VcrThunder
    @VcrThunder Před 10 měsíci +1

    venice 2.0 Patchnotes:
    * Fewer floods
    * Houses are no longer supported on several hundred-year-old wood platforms
    * Tourists visit less frequently

  • @Onizukathebest1985
    @Onizukathebest1985 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I live near Venice, I'm italian. Things are quote different, you are telling a very partial Truth. Mosè Is really helping a lot, I hadn't trust in this project but I was wrong.

  • @zamarco2
    @zamarco2 Před rokem +3

    Raising Venice is not feasible at the moment and it is something that has been under consideration for decades, the problem which is not simple, it is not a matter of raising a building but an entire ancient city and Extremely fragile, then the mose was already known at the time that it was not enough but the government of the time (Berlusconi) wanted to do it anyway because it was a pharaonic work. The costs have also risen due to the various bribes taken by politicians including the then president of the Veneto region Galan in addition Piazza San Marco is the lowest point in Venice and therefore the first which widens even with low tides.

  • @flyingpanhandle
    @flyingpanhandle Před rokem +7

    Amazing how money can be a factor for critics. If you want Venice to survive cost is irrelevant.
    Venice makes money as it stands, if its underwater its makes nothing.

    • @magnusturner1893
      @magnusturner1893 Před rokem +1

      Would make sense, especially as tourism picks up, apparently tourism contributed 3B euros to the city in 2016.

    • @stian1236
      @stian1236 Před rokem +4

      @@magnusturner1893 the locals hate the tourists there

    • @TeddyKrimsony
      @TeddyKrimsony Před rokem +1

      i think an underwater city would bring in alot more money than a city with water canals

    • @--_--IMP--_--
      @--_--IMP--_-- Před rokem

      ​@@stian1236 They may hate the tourists, but they certainly don't have a problem taking those tourists' money. It's laughably hypocritical. If, as a city, you are going to make a point to fully embrace, heavily invest in and focus primarily on the tourism industry, you don't have any room to complain about tourists, especially if those tourists are the primary source of revenue for those complaining about tourists. If people in a tourist town don't want tourism, then take it up with their local government and everyone else who does want tourism enough to fully embrace it. Also, be sure to tell those tourists to go someplace else and take all of their spending money with them and to never come back. They can't have it both ways.
      None of this matters anyway, as very few of those locals are actually willing to incur the huge revenue drop that would come with eschewing tourism altogether, despite what they may claim. They can always move to a town that doesn't embrace tourism completely. They won't, though. As always, actions speak louder than words.

  • @Limosethe
    @Limosethe Před 9 měsíci +2

    I'm not a Dutch genius but I can clearly see the barriers only cleared the water by about, two feet. And that's on a day with calm seas and good weather 😂 (From the thumbnail alone)

  • @CordeliaWagner
    @CordeliaWagner Před 10 měsíci

    I am happy I visited Venice several times before it was to late.

  • @Bruhmomentos0979
    @Bruhmomentos0979 Před 2 měsíci +6

    Ngl that sponser placement was aweful

  • @bubaks2
    @bubaks2 Před 8 měsíci +4

    That art thing sounds like a scam

  • @Whistlewalk
    @Whistlewalk Před 11 měsíci +1

    Maybe its time to move Venice? At some point you just have to save what you can an move it to higher land. Its going to cost horrific amounts of money to do what you cannot in the end accomplish. To save and preserve of Venice it may be time to consider relocation.

  • @BeneluxRegion
    @BeneluxRegion Před 9 měsíci +1

    imagine if the netherlands were in charge of saving venice

  • @paul329
    @paul329 Před rokem +9

    Have the billionaires that priced all the residents out of the city pay for it.

  • @esotericsolitaire
    @esotericsolitaire Před rokem +5

    As a young woman, I was intrigued by Venice, but honestly, now when I see people sloshing through the water, it just appears unsanitary to me. I bet that place smells terrible at times.

    • @valerianocuomo996
      @valerianocuomo996 Před rokem

      Touch me,young woman,as italian, italian they have giant members, all for you,the my italian member ,large mmmmmh, member member member member ❤

  • @smartduck904
    @smartduck904 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Maybe they should have an exterior port outside and then have small transport vehicles that are able to bring things back and maybe they should turn to solar wonder if they can mount solar panels on each one of them three or four and have to run a air pump to fill out them up just have something like a buoy That holds the pipe that sucks in air above and one that blows out water below

  • @Vanom.
    @Vanom. Před 2 měsíci +1

    As bad as the sinking is, seeing the city partially submerged is surreal.

  • @hhydar883
    @hhydar883 Před rokem +27

    There must be something Italy is doing wrong and Dutch are doing right. Maybe collaborate?

    • @stian1236
      @stian1236 Před rokem +8

      the italians are italians

    • @mariogendarini3238
      @mariogendarini3238 Před rokem +7

      Simply the italians do not want to reclaim land from the sea like the dutch but to mantain the lagoon as it is.
      They need waterflow to preserve the different species that lives in that habitat, mantain the passage of all the ships and protect venice at the same time.
      Not an easy job to do all at once!

    • @loremmarston5997
      @loremmarston5997 Před rokem +1

      @@mariogendarini3238 no it’s not that… Dutch started out protecting them self against flooding. Problem is that Italy is sadly corrupt.

    • @cinilaknedalm
      @cinilaknedalm Před rokem

      Dutch lack corruption beyond belief

    • @mariogendarini3238
      @mariogendarini3238 Před rokem +6

      @@loremmarston5997 come on now, italy it’s not a third world country!
      Mose had corruption problems and delays like all the big projects in major countries, look at the new berlin airport.
      This barrier was made that way for a lot of reasons and corruption isn’t one of those.

  • @stian1236
    @stian1236 Před rokem +10

    so it floods beacause they dont use it when its needed...

    • @curiosity780
      @curiosity780 Před rokem

      It's not actually fully finished yet lol

  • @James-rm7sr
    @James-rm7sr Před 2 měsíci

    It might stop Venice from reaching outside the lagoon, but they could build a massive dam which would then block the water and pump out the extra water. The issue being Venice is just falling slowly into the lagoon it would help with that to a great extent, but wouldn't last forever.

    • @zachmoyer1849
      @zachmoyer1849 Před 2 měsíci

      they went with the system they did because the lagoon ecosystem is dependent on the tides bring in fresh nutrients if you build a damn and pump the water out as you propose you would essentially kill a good portion of the wild life within the lagoon

  • @yurttgjk
    @yurttgjk Před rokem +1

    last i've heard was not flood but drought in Venice.. what a surprise

  • @Bxu021
    @Bxu021 Před rokem +3

    The idea is futuristic, the model is still in beta testing, I wonder what the later generations will look like.

  • @williamstearns7490
    @williamstearns7490 Před rokem +3

    It’s Italy, where they criminally prosecuted geologists and gave them 6 years in prison for not predicting the L'Aquila earthquake.
    You think any team of Italian geologists are going to really take a swing at something as ambitious lifting Venice?
    As a geologist myself I’d want a BIG paycheck in an offshore account, and a ticket to a non-extradition country in my pocket, before I’d gear-up to take the first core sample.

    • @NigelMarston
      @NigelMarston Před rokem

      The same Italy whose bridges are collapsing, and who made the Leaning Tower worse before asking for help from another nation. Corruption and bureaucracy at its finest.

  • @RH-hz9ly
    @RH-hz9ly Před 9 měsíci

    I don't know how to activate it nor flood system but seeing the shorts from this video about the system somehow I knew it won't works 😅

  • @sontodosnarcos
    @sontodosnarcos Před 7 měsíci +1

    Let's face it: a city built this way is doomed from the beginning. It is just a matter of time. At some point, we will have to let go of it and accept its fate.

  • @gauzed7556
    @gauzed7556 Před rokem +5

    Italy: We've tried everything and we can't keep Venice from flooding! Real solutions cost too much and there is no political will to do what needs to be done!
    The Netherlands: Hold my beer...

  • @denaamisdaan
    @denaamisdaan Před rokem +3

    They should’ve called the experts: the Dutch.
    And sometimes we as humans need to accept we can’t help but let nature win. So what we lose Venice? Some cities will become legends after all. Look at Ancient Rome

    • @GrillerRohde
      @GrillerRohde Před rokem

      Yes sometimes we need to leave and abandon Cities but it’s not that easy.
      Leaving Venice means, leaving behind the resources invested, leaving the industry and homes.
      Thousands of people would need to be distributed somewhere else, industry would be forced to move.
      Some companies will most likely not even be able to move an go bankrupt.
      The income of the tourists would be gone, old heritage would be left forever and get destroyed over time.
      Abandoning Venice will come with many downsides and many unhappy citizens.

    • @kelvinsurname7051
      @kelvinsurname7051 Před rokem

      ​@@GrillerRohde we should never abandon this precious, gorgeous cultural rich city, we can and should safe it.

  • @tinkabreytenbach-sima8218
    @tinkabreytenbach-sima8218 Před 10 měsíci

    They should build catchment dams that could actually be used to produce electricity, since Europe has an energy problem, and they can also pump water into Europe for usage, even if it is just for sever management. But if the water can be desalinated it can also be used for crop farming.