As a follow-up to my previous post that referenced the minor annoyance (ok, maybe not minor) that requires an urban adaptation that residents of Venice must make to navigate the watery public spaces during high water seasons. Through puddles and raised walkways, urban dwellers deal with this in fine form by the age-old tradition of adaptation. What happens when minor annoyance becomes major problem?
:: images via The Telegraph
The Telegraph offers a more dire look at when the waters don’t just rise, but flood to extreme levels: “More than 95 per cent of the historic city centre, including St Mark’s Square, was under water as the city was swamped by the most severe flood since 1986…
:: images via The Telegraph
Or perhaps a case study in ways to adapt to rising waters in cities, as these professional wakeboarders show in the following images… when in Venice…
Thanks for this informative post.