Part of ancient Aurelian Wall ringing Rome collapses after heavy rain

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ROME - A six-metre section of Rome's ancient Aurelian Wall collapsed near the capital's central train station after days of heavy rain, a conservation official said Friday.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 02/11/2007 (6631 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

ROME – A six-metre section of Rome’s ancient Aurelian Wall collapsed near the capital’s central train station after days of heavy rain, a conservation official said Friday.

The wall, part of a 16th century restoration, crumbled into a pile of bricks Thursday evening after water infiltrated the section, said Paola Virgili, an official in charge of the wall’s restoration. No one injuries were reported.

The Aurelian Wall – named after the third-century emperor who built it to defend the city against the first barbarian onslaughts – surrounds Rome with some’ kilometres of fortifications, towers and gates.

Experts had previously determined that the entire wall section in the area, a 335-metre stretch in the north of the capital, was in danger of collapsing and they had planned to start restoring it Monday.

“It came down before we could even cordon it off,” Virgili said. “The problem is that these walls have a certain age and they are vulnerable to water infiltration.”

Virgili said workers would put up emergency buttresses to shore up the collapsed section, while restoration on the entire endangered stretch would begin in a few months. It was not yet clear how much the works would cost, but Virgili said her budget stood at almost C$2.7 million.

Thursday’s collapse was not the first.

In 2001, a 30-metre stretch in the south of Rome collapsed and it took years to restore it. The city regularly allocates money for the monument, but the amounts are usually only enough to renovate the most fragile sections.

Virgili said a full restoration of the entire wall would cost at least C$135 million.

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