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Venice's walls are crumbling down 

The real danger to Venice isn't flooding, it's the destruction of brick by saltwater.

Brick wall in Venice

ABOVE: This wall in Venice's Cannaregio district shows how salt has worked its way through the bricks after repeated acqua alta tidal flooding from a nearby canal. (The average flood level in this square is only ankle-deep, so you can see how dramatically the saltwater has migrated upward.)


The rumors that Venice is sinking are greatly exaggerated, at least for now. Yes, sea levels are rising, but there's no indication that the city will become a latter-day Atlantis in our lifetimes (or even in our children's).

The immediate threat is more prosaic: As storm tides called acqua alta increase in frequency, the city's buildings and canal walls--which are mostly made of brick--are exposed to inundation by saltwater for several hours at a time.

When the water recedes, it leaves wet bricks behind, and the salt slowly works its way up the brickwork. The salt corrodes the bricks, and eventually the bricks break down, turning to powder.

Hosing bricks down with freshwater after a soaking by acqua alta can help to slow the damage. (We once spent several months in a palazzo whose owner flushed the building's ground-floor interior with "sweet water" whenever the lobby was flooded.)

Unfortunately, this isn't always practical, and rinsing salt water from bricks is a stopgap measure at best. Over the long haul, bricks that are attacked by saltwater succumb to rot and need to be replaced. It isn't uncommon to see Venetian bricklayers chipping old, crumbling bricks out of walls and replacing them with new bricks of an identical color and design.

What Venice is doing:

The MOSE project (Venice's version of the Thames Barrier) is designed to minimize flooding by isolating the Venetian Lagoon from the Adriatic Sea when storm tides threaten to cover large areas of the city. This should help to reduce the impact of saltwater on brick walls away from canals and the Lagoon.

However, walls along bodies of water or within flooding distance of drains will remain at risk, and not just because of acqua alta: Wakes from speedboats, water taxis, barges, and water buses will continue to erode canal walls and splash saltwater on building walls that face canals or the Lagoon.

The stresses on brick walls can be reduced, but in the end, restoration--not preservation--is the only feasible solution.


More photos:

Salt on brick wall in Cannaregio

ABOVE: Salt  has worked its way to the surface of bricks on a residential building on the Campiello de la Madonna in Venice's sestiere or district of Cannaregio.


Salt on brick

ABOVE: Salt has formed a crust on the surface of this brick.


Salt from efflorescence in Venice

ABOVE: I sampled the salt, which had the texture of fine table salt and tasted like sea salt.


Salt on the ground in Campiello de la Madonna, Cannaregio

ABOVE: Some of the salt has fallen from the bricks onto the pavement.


Bricklayer repairs Venice wall

Bricklayer in Venice

ABOVE: Bricklayers repair a crumbling wall in Venice by chipping out old bricks and replacing them with new ones.


Bricks with membrane to prevent migration of salt

ABOVE: Here,  you can see a section of new, historically accurate restoration bricks above old, salt-stained bricks. A waterproof membrane has been installed between the old and new courses to stop saltwater from migrating upward during acqua alta.


Also see:

Acqua Alta veniceforvisitors.com
Our illustrated article describes the storm tides that can flood low-lying areas of Venice for several hours at a time, especially from late fall through early spring. It includes links to forecasting sites and apps, and it tells what to expect when you hear warning sirens.

Venice: Brick
The University of Mary Washington has published an excellent discussion (with photos and diagrams) of brick and its problems in Venice.


About the author:

Durant Imboden photo.Durant Imboden has written about Venice, Italy since 1996. He covered Venice and European travel at About.com for 4-1/2 years before launching Europe for Visitors (including Venice for Visitors) with Cheryl Imboden in 2001.

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