logo
Legal battle looms over Italy plan to build world's longest suspension bridge

Legal battle looms over Italy plan to build world's longest suspension bridge

Italy's decision to
approve the construction between Sicily and the mainland of what would be the world's longest single-span bridge has set the stage for a legal battle that could further delay a project first conceived by the ancient Romans.
Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni's right-wing government gave its final approval for the bridge over the Strait of Messina on Wednesday, earmarking €13.5 billion (US$15.8 billion) for a project that has been under discussion for more than 50 years.
The Strait of Messina Bridge would measure nearly 3.7km (2.2 miles), with the suspended span reaching 3.3km, surpassing Turkey's Canakkale Bridge, currently the longest, by 1,277 metres.
With three car lanes in each direction flanked by a double-track railway, the bridge would have the capacity to carry 6,000 cars an hour and 200 trains a day - reducing the time to cross the strait by ferry from up to 100 minutes to 10 minutes by car.
'They could offer me three times the value of my house, but that doesn't matter to me. What matters is the landscape. They must not touch the Strait of Messina,' said Mariolina De Francesco, a 75-year-old living in the Sicilian city of Messina.
More than 440 properties will have to be expropriated on the Sicilian side and in the Calabria region on the mainland to make way for the bridge and connecting roads and railways.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

4 years after Evergrande crash, Chinese families are still stuck in ‘broken houses'
4 years after Evergrande crash, Chinese families are still stuck in ‘broken houses'

South China Morning Post

time6 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

4 years after Evergrande crash, Chinese families are still stuck in ‘broken houses'

Rebecca Wei's new home still looks like a construction site. The road running up to the high-rise housing complex in the central Chinese city of Luoyang is unfinished, dissolving into gravel before reaching the front gate. Wei's apartment itself is little more than a shell. The floors are bare cement. There is no permanent water or electricity supply, and the building does not comply with Chinese fire safety regulations. 'The developer delivered the property without even meeting the basic inspection standards, essentially saying, 'Take it or leave it,'' Wei told the Post. Wei is one of millions of Chinese homebuyers who are still living in the shadow of property giant China Evergrande Group's collapse four years ago, which triggered a US$300 billion debt crisis that shook China's housing market to its foundations. Facing a liquidity crunch, developers froze construction on housing projects across the country, leaving buyers like Wei – who had often prepaid for their homes – stranded and facing severe financial losses. Many are still waiting for their homes to be completed to this day. Others, including Wei, have finally moved into their flats, only to find the developers had cut corners and delivered properties in a 'barely liveable' condition.

Hong Kong to begin Legislative Council nominations on October 24
Hong Kong to begin Legislative Council nominations on October 24

South China Morning Post

time7 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Hong Kong to begin Legislative Council nominations on October 24

Hong Kong will begin the nomination process for its next Legislative Council on October 24, with the current legislature standing prorogued on the same day, the government has announced. Chief Secretary for Administration Eric Chan Kwok-ki said on Wednesday that the date was set after taking the election date of December 7 into consideration. In a letter from Chan to Legco President Andrew Leung Kwan-yuen, the city's second-highest official said that the current Legislative Council would recess on October 24 'to prevent giving undue advantage to incumbent members over other candidates during the election period, or creating an impression to that effect.' He added that the arrangement, which would be gazetted on Friday, was consistent with the procedure followed by the previous Legco. The letter did not specify the duration of the nomination period. For the previous election in 2021, it lasted 14 days. The legislature is currently on its final summer recess and will hold its first chamber meeting on September 3. Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu is scheduled to deliver his fourth Policy Address to the lawmakers in September.

Sales of Singapore's million-dollar public flats hit record high
Sales of Singapore's million-dollar public flats hit record high

South China Morning Post

time8 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Sales of Singapore's million-dollar public flats hit record high

A record number of Singapore public housing units were sold for S$1 million (US$780,000) or more in the June quarter, a private data provider said on Wednesday, taking the number of high-value sales in the first half of the year to almost 75 per cent of last year's total. Advertisement Eight out of 10 Singaporeans live in public housing built and sold by the government, and its affordability is a key issue for policymakers alongside high living costs. According to real estate agency OrangeTee Group, a record 415 flats were sold at prices above S$1 million in the second quarter, a 75.8 per cent increase compared to the same period last year, after 348 sales in the first quarter. Sales of million-dollar flats this year are 'on track to exceed last year's full-year record of 1,035 units', OrangeTee Group analysts said in a report. The most expensive resale in the quarter was a 122-square-metre (1,313-square-foot) flat which sold for S$1,658,888, the report showed. A public housing block in Singapore's Chinatown. Eight in 10 Singaporeans live in government-built flats. Overall, resale prices rose 0.9 per cent on a quarterly basis, according to earlier government data. While prices have now risen for 21 straight quarters, it was the smallest rise since the second quarter of 2020, during the Covid-19 pandemic.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store