Huge landslide narrowly misses Swiss mountain village
A large section of the crumbling mountain above Brienz/Brinzauls broke off around midnight narrowly missing the village in canton Graubünden in southeastern Switzerland.
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Riesige Felsmassen verfehlten Bündner Bergdorf Brienz nur knapp
The landslide left a huge mass of rock on the cantonal road to Lenzerheide near the village school building, according to a tweet from the municipality of Albula posted around 5am on Friday.
There have been no reports of damage in the village that was evacuated on May 12.
“We assume that there is more to come, unfortunately,” Albula spokesperson Christian Gartmann told Keystone-SDA early on Friday.
Geologists told a press conference on Friday afternoon that two-thirds of the two million cubic metres of rock threatening to fall had thundered down the mountain above Brienz during the night. Mayor of Albula Daniel Albertin spoke of a lucky day. The experts had not expected the debris flow to stop in front of the village and spare it completely.
But the people of Brienz must continue to exercise patience, as safety in the village is not yet guaranteed, Andreas Huwiler, geologist for canton Graubünden, told the media. The debris flow, which in places is piling up to a height of twelve metres, is not yet stable.
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Gartmann said the huge rockfall had only been heard, not seen, because it was pitch black at the time. But the rocks made a lot of noise, he said.
At midnight, the community officially announced “phase blue” – the highest of the five danger levels. “Above Brienz/Brinzauls a very big event has started. The tempo has increased tenfold since Thursday morning,” the Albula community tweeted at just after midnight. The phase blue was lifted on Friday afternoon.
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Brienz/Brinzauls is located in the southeastern Swiss canton of Graubünden, at an altitude of about 1,150 metres.
The 86 inhabitants were evacuated on May 12 after geology experts warned that a mass of two million cubic metres of rock looming over the village could break loose.
Officials said at the time that experts saw a 60% chance of the rock falling in smaller chunks that might not reach the village or valley but also a 10% chance that the entire mass could tumble down, threatening lives and property.
On June 7, residents were temporarily allowed to go home for the first time since being evacuated, but only for 90-minute visits.
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