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Morning commuters in Osaka’s busy Kita Ward got an unexpected surprise on March 11, when a massive steel pipe pushed its way out of the road near Osaka-Umeda Station. The 27-metre-long pipe shot up nearly 13 metres into the air around 6.50 am, startling passersby with a loud “dull boom” and scattering pieces of asphalt.
No one was injured, but parts of the area were quickly sealed off, causing traffic chaos around Umeda.The pipe that rose from belowThe giant pipe — about 3.5 metres wide and weighing roughly 56 tonnes — was part of a construction project designed to connect a sewer line with a rainwater storage pipe. As per news reports, witnesses saw the pipe suddenly surge upward beneath the Shin-Midosuji elevated highway after concrete debris fell from the site.
Police rushed in while firefighters began pumping water into the pipe to gradually weigh it down.The culprit? Probably buoyancyAuthorities say the exact cause of the pipe eruption is still under investigation. However, early assessments suggest groundwater buoyancy may have played a role. The pipe may have floated upward after groundwater accumulated inside it, reducing its effective weight and overcoming the surrounding soil’s resistance — pushing it through the road surface.
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