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It is a national icon, one of the world’s greatest tourist attractions – and an appalling advertisement for Italian builders. But now, 18 years after it was closed to the public for fears that it might topple over, the Leaning Tower of Pisa has been stabilised and has been declared safe for at least another three centuries.
“All of our best expectations have been confirmed,” said Michele Jamiolkowski, emeritus professor of geotechnical engineering at Turin Polytechnic, who led the project to safeguard the tower. “Now we can say that the tower can rest easy for at least 300 years.”
If Professor Jamiolkowski is right – and William Hill yesterday was giving odds of 4-6 that he is – the Committee to Safeguard the Tower of Pisa will have succeeded where many others have failed. Its medieval architects had got only as far as the third floor when the structure, built on unstable clay, began to lean in 1178. Benito Mussolini ordered it to be returned to a vertical position in the 1930s, with concrete poured into its foundations, but the result was that the tower sank further.
By 1990 it had tilted more than four metres off its true vertical, and conservationists estimated that the entire 14,500-tonne structure would have collapsed “some time between 2030 and 2040”.
The tower reopened at the end of 2001, after a €30 million operation in which it was anchored to cables and lead counterweights while 70 tonnes of soil was removed from the north side – away from the lean – and cement was injected into the ground to relieve the pressure.
The team stabilising the tower was advised on excavation techniques by John Burland, Professor of Soil Mechanics at Imperial College, London, who also played a key role in securing the tower of Big Ben during construction of the Jubilee Line extension at Westminster.
The tilt has now returned to where it was in the early 19th century, with a lean out of true of 3.99 metres, and the tower is being cleaned by restorers using lightweight scaffolding.
Professor Jamiolkowski said that there had never been any intention to straighten the 56m tower, only to stop it sinking further. The Pisa authorities are planning to reopen a “secret” side door in the tower, closed in the 1930s, enabling visitors to look up to the sky through the tower’s eight storeys. The view had been obstructed by instruments monitoring the structure’s stability, which will now be removed.
A ceremony marking the completion of the final phase of restoration will be held at the end of the summer, according to Giuseppe Bentivoglio, technical director of the site.
The Leaning Tower is the campanile, or belltower, of the cathedral and as constructed in three stages, starting in 1173 at the height of Pisa’s military and economic power, and completed two centuries later.
The seventh floor was completed in 1319 and the bell chamber in 1372. Galileo Galilei is said to have dropped cannon balls from the tower in a gravity experiment.
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Richard, you were probably able to buy your ticket 5 years ago as it re-opened in 2001...
Ian, London, UK
I had a conversation with some professors from the Imperial about that...I think they are doing it well this time. Being a structural engineer and a conservationist myself, reading this is a big news for me! Bravo!
Dragana, Belgrade, Serbia
was it really closed to the public 18 years ago? how then did we manage to buy tickets and ascend the tower 5 years ago? on that sunny day, entering the field of miracles was the most moving sight I had ever seen
Richard, Gerrards Cross,
> When the 'experts' say it will last another 300 years, people
> should be careful of it falling soon.
You said it! What do them there "experts" know, what with all that fancy book learnin' and all.
Art Carnage, Dallas,
When the 'experts' say it will last another 300 years, people should be careful of it falling soon.
J Wilson, Onalaska, US
I have to agree with Grainne
"Considering that the tower has been around since 1173, I suppose the Italian builders weren't that bad after all."
Just short of a 1000 years and this wonderful and beautiful structure is still standing. I would say that is a feather in the cap of Italian builders.
Keith, High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire
I can say that I went up the Leaning tower in 1978 and was mightily scared of heights at the time but having done it before the tower was closed I feel a real sense of achievement.
I was eight at the time and it doesnt seem possible but I would love to be able to go to the top again
Henry North, London, UK
Great building the leaning tower is.
yuchaoqun, wuhan, China
Considering that the tower has been around since 1173, I suppose the Italian builders weren't that bad after all.
Grainne Tierney, Gambettola, Italy
It is news Richard. You read it and commented on it - which makes it news worthy.
AT, Sydney,
Pisa has a rival. In South east Asia. To be exact, in Teluk Intan, South Perak, Malaysia. It was constructed well over a hundred years ago as a water tower. It has a clock. As a child many years ago, I played in its shade in the hot tropical sun. It was already leaning. Today, very much more.
San Ying, Montreal, Canada
Not exactly news is it? Come on The Times - I hope you didn't pay for this.
Richard, Plymouth,
What captivated me the most was the PISA picture in the front was 'visually treated' and the one in the news is not. Good work by the experts. I mean the people who reinforced the tower to its 19th century position.
Ganesan Kannuchamy, London, the UK
Fascinating, but this story first appeared in June 2001, and then it was John Burland, an engineering professor at London's Imperial College who made the announcement. He said: "It will take 300 years for the lean to get back to where it was in 1990,"
This was widely reported. So what gives?
jon livesey, Sunnyvale, CA/USA
pisa is a very beautiful city. there is the leaning tower, but not only. pisa is an important university city and one of the most famous reserch centre in italy and in the world...
angelo, pisa, italy