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The rain returns to flood the streets of Denia leaving third world images

August 09 from 2017 - 12: 54

With a total of 66 liters per square meter, the rain fall this Wednesday morning in Denia is among the strongest that are remembered in recent months. From the first hour the water has not stopped falling, leaving images that are already, unfortunately, habitual in these circumstances.

The highway of Marines it was a real river, like the perpendicular paths or the Camí de Gandía, which had to be cut off at the height of the Alcalalí highway. In the urban center, the Camí del Llavador deserves special attention, which has once again been cut off to circulation and where the water gushed out of the sewers, leaving a very unpleasant smell in the area.

Another point where water has been most present is in the group of homes San Andrés, next to the Round of the Walls, where the height of the water arrived at the doors of the parked vehicles. In addition, for an hour has been cut to traffic Joan Fuster Avenue, in the stretch from the street Diana to the cam Pou de la Muntanya.

Today Wednesday will not close the street Marqués de Campo

From the City Hall have reported that, in order to facilitate the mobility of vehicles during the day today, will not be closed to traffic the Calle Marques de Campo At 14: 00 hours as usual this summer.

Comments
  1. Bernardo gui says:

    As all the cities of vacations, pretty in summer and a disaster as soon as it rains

  2. Teresa Masian says:

    It is a shame that in the years that I have been coming to Denia the streets are getting worse every day, let alone the beach. I would like to know where the money they collect is being spent.
    Instead of so much party they could already asphalt streets, put sidewalks and clean the ditches as a priority.
    It's a real shame

  3. Manolete says:

    Unfortunately Denia gives a third world image rain or not. The deplorable state of the pavement of the streets, the potholes, the horizontal signs practically erased (you have to guess where there is a zebra crossing), the "housing estates" with the pavement destroyed, without sewers or public lighting, or cleaning service ... to to follow.

  4. Leon says:

    It does not need rain to make it look like a third world
    Visit the infected street Ondara and see reasons not to live or leave Denia
    How disgusting of »City»

  5. Luis says:

    Every time it rains the same thing happens. Nothing new. But good pictures. We all know why this happens. It happens to build in any way in a flood zone.

  6. Susana says:

    Its title seems a bit exaggerated to me… I don't see third world images, I don't think they know them… They don't know what the consequences of a heavy rain are like…. Greetings from Argentina.

  7. Miguel says:

    Defining the infrastructure of Denia as a third world is not enough. In the streets of Playa Santa Ana there is no street lighting and when night falls, people who dare to go for walks carry lanterns walking along the bike path !!! Really Third World have to be exposed to outrages, vandalism, robberies and other risks in absolutely dark and dark streets. Not even in the nineteenth century did they live like this.


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