Quantcast

Broken West Village Water Main Was Old

2008_05_watermain.jpg
Photo by Erik Dane of The Foggy Monocle

The late Saturday night water main break in the West Village has left residents with water-damaged apartments and businesses in the lurch. A restaurant owner lamented about throwing away food and needing to be closed over the holiday weekend to the Daily News, "New Yorkers love to brunch and when there is a holiday weekend there is an extra day of brunch. We got hit really hard."

Residents and businesses were evacuated--some wore I [Heart] NY plastic bags to wade through the water. One basement apartment tenant described what happened in his home, "Most of my things were just bobbing in the water"--and said the water was three-and-half feet high. Another restaurant owner said while the venue wasn't damaged, "water was coming up brown" so they closed.

The Department of Environmental Protection says a 20-inch main under West 10th Street between 7th Avenue and Belecker was old. DEP First Deputy Commissioner Steve Lawitts said, "It's mostly a matter of age. Just from the number of years of freezing and thawing and other vibrations on the street, it will eventually break."

The DEP does try to replace old pipes, but they hadn't gotten a chance to replace this particular one. Though most people have been let back into their homes, clean up will continue.

Contact the author of this article or email tips@gothamist.com with further questions, comments or tips.

Comments [rss]

  • Blairy Blair

    Not really. It's all relative. Europe has some much older infrastructure.

  • mocanlagunas

    Isn't everything old in this city anyway?

    Subways, bridges, buildings...

blog comments powered by Disqus

send a tip

tips@gothamist.com