In the end, it disappeared almost as quickly as it had appeared. A giant sinkhole which swallowed a chunk of road the length of a city block in the southwestern Japanese city of Fukuoka has been filled mere days after it appeared, a testament to Japanese engineering and efficiency.
After the sinkhole appeared on November
8, subcontractors worked around the clock to fill in the 30 meter (98
ft) wide, 15 meter (50 ft) deep hole by the 12th with a mixture of sand
and cement. The job was complicated by the water which had seeped in
from sewage pipes destroyed by collapsing sections of road.
After
that it only took another 48 hours to reinstall all utilities --
electricity, water, sewage, gas and telecommunication lines -- and to
resurface the road. There were no reports of injuries.
The
gigantic sinkhole opened suddenly last week in Hakata ward in Fukuoka's
business district, swallowing huge sections of road near underground
work to extend a subway tunnel.
City
officials were working nearby to extend the subway from a nearby
station to the city center along a 1.4-kilometer (0.86 mile) route.
Motohisa
Oda, a crisis management officer from the city of Fukuoka, told CNN
that the underground construction work may have triggered the collapse.
The
gaping hole -- which started off as two smaller ones before merging
into the larger cavity -- appeared 300 meters from the JR Hakata
station, one of the city's main transport hubs.
The
mayor of Fukuoka, Soichiro Takashima, said the affected ground had been
strengthened by a factor of 30 because of the sand and cement refill.
Previously
comprised largely of sand, the soil's composition was suspected to be a
part of the cause for the huge hole, according to local civil
engineering experts.
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