High tide floods Venice as dike-on-demand wasn’t activated
High tides flooded St. Mark’s Square in Venice on Tuesday, propelled by winds that were stronger than predicted, and an experimental system of inflatable barriers wasn’t activated to prevent water from invading the lagoon city.
The system, while still in an experimental phase, gets activated when high tides are predicted to reach at least 1.3 metres (4 feet, 4 inches). Tuesday’s tide was predicted to reach 1.25 metres. Instead, it kept rising, to a height of 1.38 metres, in late afternoon.
Some shops were flooded, and Venetians waded in water as they scrambled to set out raised walkways. Damage to shops and other business was destined to compound the suffering already sharply felt in Venice’s economy by tourism largely washed away by the pandemic.
“Unfortunately, the weather is freer than us. It does what it wants,” Venice Mayor Luigi Brugnaro said ruefully, referring to the stronger-than-expected winds that whipped across the Adriatic from Croatia’s coastline.