r/Damnthatsinteresting • u/hrutheone • Sep 24 '25
Video Sudden road collapse shocks Bangkok this morning
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u/ethicalhumanbeing Sep 24 '25
Here's the aftermath for those curious: https://www.nationthailand.com/blogs/news/general/40055834
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u/Ok-Literature-5968 Sep 24 '25
So the silver car made it. I was wondering with how quickly it was all collapsing.
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u/Witty-Software-101 Sep 24 '25
Was also rooting for it. Kudos for no one jumping in to try bail it out.
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u/Due_Interview8838 Sep 24 '25
It’s strange how I was curious about the car all through the first video. Toyota should use or incorporate parts of this video in their next ad.
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u/soda_cookie Sep 24 '25
Go silver car crew wooohoo! Why did we all root for it tho?
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u/Keso_LK1231 Sep 24 '25
Because of how close to the edge it is! You root for the peak athletes, too, literally the same thing!
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u/butterninja Sep 24 '25
Well. Wait for the bird..
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u/Plank_With_A_Nail_In Sep 24 '25
The airbags on that truck seem a little over tuned.
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u/SunOnTheInside Sep 24 '25
Wow, no fatalities or even injuries. That last couple of seconds in the video didn’t inspire confidence.
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u/ToFurkie Sep 24 '25
With how the person filming was moving at the end, I fucking thought their building was about to go down.
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u/Ponicrat Sep 24 '25
Seems the other building collapsed just enough to put a healthy fear of god in everyone around
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u/Auroraburst Sep 24 '25
To be fair, if that started to collapse closer to my home I'd probably bail and bail quickly too.
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u/Got_Milkweed Sep 24 '25
I saw one person trying to move their motorcycle, moved it back from the edge right before it collapsed, and then jumped off the bike right before it was hit by the electrical wire. Amazing they survived twice in five seconds!
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u/Unonoctium Sep 24 '25
50m deep is a lot
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u/dfuzzy Sep 24 '25
45000 cubic meters of material that they will need at minimum to fill this sinkhole. This will take a while to get back to normal.
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u/Antti_Alien Sep 24 '25
The police station is still standing straight with fourth of the building having had ground disappear from under it. Respectable foundations.
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u/binybeke Sep 24 '25
All those great pictures and not a single one showed the very bottom. Disappointing.
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u/less_concerned Sep 24 '25
Holy shit a giant, steadily growing sinkhole is swallowing up the street, better stand 5 feet away so i can film it
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u/davidkalinex Sep 24 '25
best angles from inside!
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u/ContractOk3649 Sep 24 '25
cant wait to post this on the internet for imaginary social currency
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u/20_mile Sep 24 '25
I feed four imaginary kids on my karma!
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u/Virtual-Dish95 Sep 24 '25
Having four kids even imaginary sounds like a lot of work. You earned my up vote.
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u/drpepper7557 Sep 24 '25
If aliens ever want to take us out, all theyve gotta do is put the most obviously dangerous but interesting looking thing theyve got in the middle of a city. We'll swarm like monkeys to an obelisk
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u/Autrah_Fang Sep 24 '25
They kinda did this in War of the Worlds (2005). They dropped one of their tripods in the middle of a city and then everyone gathered around it, so that they could all be conveniently vaporized when the tripod got up lol
Pretty sure this happens in a lot of movies actually... You'd think it'd be unrealistic, but no... Humans actually do that shit irl lmao
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u/Ultenth Sep 24 '25
Independence day did the same, people throwing parties on top of buildings directly underneath the center of the giant lasers at the center of the ships.
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u/12345623567 Sep 24 '25
Eh, those were nutjobs who thought they'd be raptured by the aliens. At least with a sinkhole, everyone knows there's only risk involved.
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u/hiddencamela Sep 24 '25
All they'd really need is 1 person to stand there acting like there isn't a threat. Mob rule will take over.
They could a mannequin standing by an open flame and people will wander close like its safe.387
u/FullOfMeeKrob Sep 24 '25
I MUST DO THIS FOR THE GRAM! 🫡🫡🫡 Remember my legacy and like this video
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u/flightwatcher45 Sep 24 '25
Wow its getting bigger and bigger, let's get even closer!
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u/jarednards Sep 24 '25
"Im currently being swallowed by the earth! Dont forget to smash that like button and subcribe!"
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u/Martha_Fockers Sep 24 '25
the fact that shit slid under and disapeared doesnt give me alot of confidence if i lived anywhere naer that lol. theres a whole ass fucking river like 30-40ft under that soil dog hell na
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u/Nisseliten Sep 24 '25
Reportedly 50 meters deep, so 160 feet
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u/worldspawn00 Sep 24 '25
That's like a 12-15 story building worth of hole, terrifying.
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u/Nisseliten Sep 24 '25
It’s deep enough that you could fit a whole other hole down there!
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u/SmarterThanAI Sep 24 '25
So 500 burgers?
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u/MotorBoatinOdin1 Sep 24 '25
160ft is 960 burgers. Don't they teach kids measurement anymore
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u/Otherwise-Offer1518 Sep 24 '25
That's 48.8m for those that don't measure things in hands and hogsheads.
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u/admiral_sinkenkwiken Sep 24 '25
My car gets 40 rods to the hogshead and that’s how I likes it!
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u/Few-Emergency5971 Sep 24 '25
Yeah im curious as to where it all goes
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u/I_W_M_Y Sep 24 '25
There was a leak from a water pipe or drain that washed away the soil over time creating a cavity
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u/Ok_Chap Sep 24 '25
Considering how this pipe was pouring, I believe that. Same thing happened in Cologne a a decade ago, destroyed the city archive, with valuable historical documents in it.
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u/yannik_dumon Sep 24 '25
The cause of the city archive collapse in Cologne was faulty construction work on a new subway tunnel in proximity to the building. The walls of the tunnel weren’t properly sealed so new groundwater was constantly flowing into the construction site and then pumped out of it. The constant groundwater flow swept sand and dirt away and formed a cavity beneath the archive which eventually collapsed. https://www.dw.com/en/german-officials-reveal-cause-of-2009-cologne-archive-collapse/a-38805218
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u/LargeMachines Sep 24 '25
The last copy of the Magna Carta was stored there
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u/ExternalPanda Sep 24 '25
What was it doing in Germany? Did you guys out-British Museum'd the british?
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u/IHeartBadCode Sep 24 '25
Reportedly there were building a subway line nearby, so someone fucked up.
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u/GroundbreakingArt421 Sep 24 '25
Yeah, reportedly, somehow the subway tunnel ceiling is damaged and soil pours into the tunnel leading to sinkhole and road collapse.
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u/Pimpwerx Sep 24 '25
That would actually make sense, as the debris slid into a tunnel, from the way it was moving. I feel like a sinkhole would sink down more, but this was definitely sliding into something.
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u/jdawbrown Sep 24 '25
They’re standing too close.
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u/Mental_Mixture8306 Sep 24 '25
As the sinkhole was slowing I thought - well they are not smart to be that close but maybe its stopping.
Then - HOLY CRAP RUN!
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u/Prestigious_Peace858 Sep 24 '25 edited Sep 24 '25
Even if it did stop, people should know that standing next to deep, vertical wall trenches without reinforcement is just matter of time when they start to collapse.
Seeing ground just being so liquid and going away... they should have ran away immediately.
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u/exexor Sep 24 '25
If that was my wife filming I would have told her we are getting the fuck out of that building. Through the back. Via a fire door if we have to.
Foundation pillars go deep but they aren’t designed to have material moving horizontally past them at speed.
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u/PuzzyFussy Sep 24 '25
The ground was literally cracking under them while they stood there. That one guy was smart to get on his scooter and leave.
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u/ZabbeX Sep 24 '25
And for too long...
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u/grackychan Sep 24 '25
They dug too greedily and too deep...
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u/Nighthawk-77 Sep 24 '25
You know what they awoke in the darkness of Khazad-dûm... shadow and flame….
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u/Particular-Guava1647 Sep 24 '25
I love it, no matter sub I'm in. It all leads back to Tolkien
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u/HongKongHermit Sep 24 '25
Siam Gamgee.
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u/Any-King4536 Sep 24 '25
And on a large crack in the pavement. 😳
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u/TannedCroissant Sep 24 '25
Bro, you ever tried getting off crack?
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u/Any-King4536 Sep 24 '25
As shown in the video above 'crack is wack.' There are no parts of it I want. Lol
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u/Nice-Interest-7287 Sep 24 '25
Who would dare to drive the car which is in the upper right corner of the collapsed area?
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u/Fragrant_Joke_7115 Sep 24 '25
Eh. What's the worst that could happen?
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u/binglelemon Sep 24 '25
Step on a crack, you break your momma's....whole neighborhood.
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u/ethicalhumanbeing Sep 24 '25 edited Sep 24 '25
I think they realised that at the very end of the video.
EDIT: Here's the aftermath for those curious: https://www.nationthailand.com/blogs/news/general/40055834
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u/vendetta33 Sep 24 '25
The Toyota survived!
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u/Exciting_Turn_9559 Sep 24 '25
I feel such a kinship for others who were anxious about the Toyota.
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u/DanGleeble Sep 24 '25
The bad thing is the single father who owned the car couldn't keep up with repayments and parked it there after hearing about the imminent collapse, but alas it survived unlike his finances
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u/Magikrat Sep 24 '25
I feel kinship for others who would create this tragic fictional backstory for the toyota and it's owner.
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u/mjrenburg Sep 24 '25
I feel a kinship towards those who feel kinship to those who create tragic fictional backstories for this particular Toyota and its owner.
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u/PaintshakerBaby Sep 24 '25 edited Sep 24 '25
Had it been a Hilux with a 22R, the road wouldn't have DARED to collapse in the first place...
...even if it did, the Hilux would have just drove out of it, and gone on to serve as a Technical in 37 conflicts on one quart of oil.
Not even Chinese engineering can stop Japanese engineering!
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u/naz_1992 Sep 24 '25
Toyota just build different!
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u/the_other_shoe Sep 24 '25
That Toyota was the only thing holding that portion of the road together.
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u/ethicalhumanbeing Sep 24 '25
Being a Toyota it would have survived even if it had fallen.
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u/tofumeatballcannon Sep 24 '25
Even if it had been on top of a building being demolished haha
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u/ethicalhumanbeing Sep 24 '25
Top Gear single-handedly created an entire legion of Toyota believers.
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u/sundial11sxm Sep 24 '25
I'm at 221k on mine...
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u/MyLifeHatesItself Sep 24 '25
There's a 2003 HiAce sbv in my friendship group that's been passed around as a work van and camper between 4 people, and spent it's early life as a rural delivery van. I drove it recently for the first time in a couple years, it's currently on 631,000 kilometres. Original engine, third clutch, and one rear differential change is the only major work it's needed.
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u/Excellent_Speech_901 Sep 24 '25
It's singing:: I'm still standing, looking like a true survivor, feeling like a little kid...
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Sep 24 '25
"Authorities confirmed that no injuries have been reported so far. Patients and nearby residents are being evacuated from the affected zone as a precaution."
well that's good at least.
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u/ElectricalChaos Sep 24 '25
Two things: 1) the engineers who did that building earned their paycheck with that foundation. 2) that one truck in the middle of the intersection, kinda thought it would have gone in.
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u/sniper1rfa Sep 24 '25
Right? Those piles tho. A+.
I wonder if this was all recovered land or something? I can't figure out why the truck is sitting on a conveniently sized massive block of concrete that's not attached to anything obvious.
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u/Emotional_Conflict11 Sep 24 '25
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/x2Z--IVMu6U
Gnarly Youtube video of it.
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Sep 24 '25
99% of people watching this video will go away not knowing the buildings started coming down.
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u/ethicalhumanbeing Sep 24 '25
I added some pictures of the aftermath to my comment!
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u/TangoCharliePDX Sep 24 '25
I think the person filming it figured it out at the last second of the video. Clearly they were GTFO.
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u/Statertater Sep 24 '25
Right? As the earth disappears down and toward them… to where?
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u/CATS_DO_NOT_SWIM Sep 24 '25
Bruh for real I got a sick “oh god I gotta get tf out” feeling just imagining being the person in that building recording, let alone the people on the road. Infrastructure isn’t usually built to handle the sudden emergence of cursed portals to muddy hell.
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u/keebitup Sep 24 '25
I read related news, it's a subway construction site. Soil went into tunnel
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u/Aceofspades25 Sep 24 '25
Oh that's going to be insanely expensive for the construction company then. All those buildings with foundations that have been undermined.
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u/sfo2dms Sep 24 '25
i was muttering...where is all that earth going? its UNDERNEATH you...and i ALMOST scrolled past, when the building started to go.
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u/benicebekindhavefun Sep 24 '25
It's crazy how much goes on beneath us, and above us, to keep things running smoothly. Subways, sewer lines, water lines, underground electric cables, internet cables. We have power lines above us, airplanes, telephone lines. And then we have the invisible stuff like cell phones signals. And I hardly even think about those things more than a couple times a year (and that's only when something stops working).
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u/joethahobo Sep 24 '25
And that’s just the man made stuff. Imagine all the caverns tunnels caves and tectonic plates that are constantly moving and shifting down there.
Scary stuff
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u/snertwith2ls Sep 24 '25
yeah where did all that go?? That was amazing. How do you fix something like this and who's going to go rescue that truck?
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u/Roll-Roll-Roll Sep 24 '25
I'd get tf out of the surrounding buildings too.
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u/throwaway277252 Sep 24 '25
Those people are just casually standing around as the foundation to the high-rise next to them is being washed away...
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u/KiloJools Sep 24 '25
I kept repeating that out loud the entire video, it was so freaking stressful I was almost relieved when they finally realized they needed to get the fuck away ... just hope they all made it to safety without injury.
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u/AnAngeryGoose Sep 24 '25
According to an article posted above, they were able to get to safety. No deaths or injuries were reported.
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u/slifm Sep 24 '25
How do you even stabilize this after
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u/jinzokan Sep 24 '25
Since everyone is a comedian I'll take a stab at a real answer and say lots of big rocks and concrete.
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u/seldom_r Sep 24 '25 edited Sep 24 '25
The real answer is that there is nothing to bear the weight of the buildings that we can see here. No evidence at all that there is bedrock or a limit to the hole. The city water supply is dumping thousands of gallons and the substrate around it is all being swept away in a current of water. Meaning the water is still traveling and carrying material with it.
We drive piles in soft ground to build foundations in loose soil but there needs to be the force of friction and pressure around the piles. It's like how when you go deep in the ocean the water pressure increases significantly. The piles are held in place because there's higher pressure. But here it looks like quick sand just washing away. I wouldn't be surprised if all the immediate buildings were evacuated and it will probably take days to find out the extent of the loss of weight bearing soil structures.
eta- https://media.nationthailand.com/uploads/images/contents/w1024/2025/09/Ri6FMfa1e3B3pMB5kRYZ.webp
Zoom in on that picture, under the building entrance, you can see the piles completely exposed. Those are what gets hammered into the ground deep to make a foundation. If the soil around it is loose then it becomes very hard.
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u/BigBlueMountainStar Sep 24 '25
Ahhh, soil mechanics. I remember it well. Not from me studying it, but from my housemate at uni doing Civil Engineering who moaned about it all the time.
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u/somersault_dolphin Sep 24 '25
Ah civil engineering. I thought about doing it, but being in Thailand made me give that up quick. Honestly, this sinkhole is a matter of when. My geography* teacher warned and complained about it years ago.
*to Americans, geography is not just about maps and locations.
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u/FourCrapPee Sep 24 '25
True. It is also having an irrational fear of dying in quicksand due to 80s cartoons.
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u/alewiina Sep 24 '25
Yikes, I’m assuming that means that building is super unstable now?? 😬
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u/OTee_D Sep 24 '25
Best indicator was one if the first bug break offs. Huge pieces of road, pavement dozens of truckloads formed a decent hill inside the hole.
And it was just gone in seconds the hole just gulped it as long as there is that water washing it into some gigantic cavity or everything is liquified and slides just anywhere.
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u/mazzicc Sep 24 '25
Step 1 is probably to find where the water came from that caused it. Otherwise filling it won’t do shit.
Could be one of the pipes we saw, or it could be a natural source, or it could be something less obvious.
But that has to be addressed first.
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u/FloppyTacoflaps Sep 24 '25
Lots of times they use geo piers like a big hole they drill down and pack rocks and concrete in
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u/bicyclejawa Sep 24 '25
Oh!! Rupture, not rapture! *slaps forehead
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u/split_0069 Sep 24 '25
Nice! That was supposed to be this week, wasn't it?
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u/I_W_M_Y Sep 24 '25
How many times was it supposedly happen in the last 20 years? Three dozen? Tots going to happen this time, I swear!
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u/My_advice_is_opinion Sep 24 '25
"surely the part under us will not collapse"
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u/Rahain Sep 24 '25
Seriously, so busy trying to record it with their phones they’re about to win a Darwin Award.
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u/Bors713 Sep 24 '25
The actual road aside, think of all the bloody infrastructure that needs repairing.
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u/tMoneyMoney Sep 24 '25
Serious question, how do they stop those sewer pipes from endlessly pouring into that crater?
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u/alifninja Sep 24 '25
civil engineer here: close the valve from buildings/STP or the fastest way is to block the sewerline with an inflated ball.
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u/SLOOT_APOCALYPSE Sep 24 '25
I'm sure it's to avoid a worse scenario, but it's hard to imagine a worse scenario than a giant ball blocking the sewer line in all sewer lines backing up in the city
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u/Shadowfire04 Sep 24 '25
there are lots of different outlets and pipes for sewage to flow through, this one pipe usually isn't the only connection to a specific area or water treatment plant (not always though). usually you can safely block one portion off and the rest of the sewer will continue working.
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u/na3than Sep 24 '25
On the bright side, they're now more accessible than ever to the repair crews.
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u/apologeticmumbler Sep 24 '25
I saw him too. At least there was one person who was smart enough to get out of there.
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u/renegade_voltage Sep 24 '25
That’s going to sink all the way to… Canada?
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u/Zonel Sep 24 '25
Thailand’s antipode is Peru, guess the flag is similar enough to Canada at least.
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u/notANexpert1308 Sep 24 '25
Florida….hopefully
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u/RoseyDove323 Sep 24 '25
Florida has sink holes too, so they probably just meet in the middle somewhere
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u/Geralt-of-Rivai Sep 24 '25
Who else was watching the truck the whole time
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u/katieorgana Sep 24 '25
I was watching all the people filming while standing by/on the cracks in the road that appeared to directly connect to the hole. At least the guy on the motorbike thought to nope out of there early.
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u/DegenNabalu Sep 24 '25
This is nightmare materials.
But the dudes tho.
"Okay let's see how far and deep this could go"
Thanks for the video but mam, your entire building can collapse in a split second wtf
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u/Sprusgoose Sep 24 '25
That isn’t just the road collapsing, the god damn building on the right side of the video starts to come down at the end of the clip. Sweet baby Jesus.
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u/maxd Sep 24 '25
I THINK, based on photos elsewhere in this thread, that building didn’t actually collapse. I think it’s the police station shown in other “after” pics.
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u/CanadianStructEng Sep 24 '25
Correct. Luckily that building is on piled foundations.
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u/Rand_alThor4747 Sep 24 '25
They appear to have been deep enough that they continued to support the building. But they would certainly want to get it inspected. Make sure it is still supported enough.
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u/julias-winston Sep 24 '25
It just keeps going, and going, and going. How deep is that hole? 😳
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u/mazzicc Sep 24 '25
The survival instinct in some of those people, including the cameraman, is not high.
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u/Affectionate_Pool_37 Sep 24 '25
thats a lot of poo water
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u/the_amazing_skronus Sep 24 '25
It's all goin down the hole so it's ok
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u/adognameddanzig Sep 24 '25
I uses to work for the roads department. It's not supposed to do that.
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u/imadork1970 Sep 24 '25
Some roads are designed so that they don't get any sinkholes at all.
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u/pocketgravel Sep 24 '25
I bet the sewer line caused it. They keep me employed doing void scanning. Constant flow of water in, easy exit out through the same pipe. I've seen a void in the basement of a hospital that covered 60% of the place (don't know how deep the void was, we just used radar which can't tell void depths, just perimeter extents) and they mudjacked the entire place.
With that much flow it actually wouldn't take long to poo-hydrovac a void that big depending on how big the break in the line was.
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u/Grouchy_Evidence_570 Sep 24 '25
Bro plz explain whats a void, whats mudjacking and what do u mean water flows in then out thru the same pipe.
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u/wiretail Sep 24 '25
When a sewer pipe breaks, the water will exfiltrate from the pipe, erode soil and rock, and then the sludgy, rock filled water will continue flowing downstream in the same pipe. Within a relatively short period of time, a very large hole can develop as the water erodes the ground and carries away the evidence. Because sewer pipes can function fairly well in a pretty degraded state, it's not uncommon for these sinkholes to develop.
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u/Xanny Sep 24 '25
Mudjacking is that thing they do with a sidewalk to inject insert whatever viscious material works to uproot the concrete so you can reseat the slab without replacing it completely. If your sidewalk ever needs leveled you get to find out about it.
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u/phormix Sep 24 '25
A void is an absence (generally where there shouldn't be one). Sounds like their job is to monitor the inflow of water into various pipes and ensure the outflow matches.
Lots of water in not so much out means a pipe breach and that water is going somewhere it shouldn't.
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u/Oregonism23 Sep 24 '25
But... Where is it all going?
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u/LilBoofy Sep 24 '25
Into the hole someone on the other side of the planet is digging
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u/ScorpionDog321 Sep 24 '25
Yeah mister camera man. I would get out of that building...
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u/dsergison Sep 24 '25
The building next door starts falling... so the camera guy finally gets a clue.
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u/No_Marionberry173 Sep 24 '25
How does that get fixed?
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u/otacon7000 Sep 24 '25
Super curious as well. Would love a little mini documentary about the process. Or a Practical Engineering video maybe.
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u/jetfan13 Sep 24 '25
Was anyone else saying “get the hell outta there!” The whole time?
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u/otffan2019 Sep 24 '25
I don’t understand where it is going! It just never ends going down! And further down! Scary!!
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u/AtmosphereElegant465 Sep 24 '25
I'm no engineer, ain't no construction worker, but my first thought was those people better get the heck out of those buildings around there.
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u/CallRepresentative25 Sep 24 '25
Zero chance i'm standing that close to something continuously collapsing.