A slight drawback! Chile’s first drawbridge delayed after engineers realise at least one traffic deck has been fitted upside-down
- Chilean President Sebastián Piñera blames Spanish developers for mistake
- Bridge connecting Valdivia with Teja Island was set to open this month
- Gaffe becomes a laughing stock among Chileans using social media
36
View
comments
Chilean engineers have been left red faced by a delay in the grand opening of the country's first-ever drawbridge - after they discovered a major part was installed upside down.
The $30million Cau Cau bridge was supposed to open this month as an instant landmark connecting Valdivia, a coastal city in the south of Chile, with the adjacent Teja Island.
But no one will be travelling across for a while, after builders realised at least one traffic deck had been installed upside down.
Scroll down for video
How it's supposed to work: The $30million Cau Cau bridge was supposed to open this month as an instant landmark connecting Valdivia, a coastal city in the south of Chile, with the adjacent Teja Island
Gaffe: Inspectors preparing for the opening day realised at least one traffic deck had been installed upside down. Chile's president has laid the blame at the feet of the Spanish company behind the development
It's a national embarrassment for the prosperous South American country.
But its president, Sebastián Piñera, is blaming Spanish developers for the mistake.
RELATED ARTICLES
- Young daughter films mother and father being assaulted by... EXCLUSIVE: Miss Venezuela and her British ex were about to...
- Fidel Castro makes first public appearance in almost a year...
Share this article
Share'It can be fixed, ... and it will be fixed by the company that made the mistake,' fumed President Piñera.
Public Works Minister Loreto Silva added: 'The only responsible party is the builder. We are going to make them answer for this'
The bridge has ended up a laughing stock among Chilean social media users, who are wondering how construction workers managed to mess up something as seemingly clear as up and down.
One wag tweeted a scrawly child's picture of a bridge, rendered in coloured pencil, with the quip: 'Leak of the installation plans for the Cau Cau bridge in Valdivia.'
@rvfradiopopular Filtran planos de instalación del puente Cau Cau en Valdivia... pic.twitter.com/e49aSC2rmJ
— Rodrigo Garrido (@mark35d) January 9, 2014Another posted a picture of a tiny foot-bridge by a pool in a budget resort, commenting: 'One of the first tenders won by the idiots that made the bridge in Valdivia.'
Una de las primeras licitaciones que se ganaron los hueones que hicieron el puente en Valdivia: pic.twitter.com/4HW99yJG2X
— carlitos_huerta (@carlitos_huerta) January 7, 2014The mistake emerged when inspectors getting ready for opening day found that either one or two of the traffic decks were installed backwards, authorities said.
Azvi, the Spanish infrastructure company behind the bridge development, did not immediately comment. A new opening date has not been announced.
Valdivia, which is 520 miles south of Chile's sprawling capital Santiago, is home to about 125,000 people.
ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7pa3IpbCmmZmhe6S7ja6iaKaVrMBwrdGtoJyklWJ%2Fdn%2BVb21vZ3FiwK21xqGrZpyilsSjrcKkZHygmaGytHnDq5iwmqKesaixjJ2cpZmpmrFusc2goKedlafAbr7EmqOiq5VivK%2BxjK2pmp6WnrBusMScomaemanBprCMrqesoZSaeqW71qdloaydoQ%3D%3D