Lake Street sinkhole big enough to swallow a car
Of all the traffic hazards in San Francisco, a 20-foot sinkhole in the middle of the street may be the most unexpected.
Of all the traffic hazards in San Francisco, a 20-foot sinkhole in the middle of the street may be the most unexpected.
Motorists approaching Lake Street and 2nd Avenue Monday around 5 p.m. noticed something was missing — namely the road in front of them.
Of all the traffic hazards in San Francisco — overstuffed buses, darting bicycles, inattentive drivers — a 20-foot sinkhole in the middle of the street may be the most unexpected.
Nobody was injured and no vehicles were trapped when the ground underneath the intersection gave way, opening a trough tall enough to stand up in and wide enough to gobble up a good-sized car.
The intersection remained closed into Tuesday morning as crews assessed exactly what happened and how to repair the enormous gash in the roadway.
A neighbor told Richmond Blog SF the pavement that gave way appeared had been recently patched, while KTVU-TV reported a sewer line had failed and washed out the soil supporting the pavement.
Jesse Garnier is the editor and founder of SFBay. A Mission District native, he also teaches journalism as associate professor at San Francisco State University.
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