Hollännesch Zuch Crash-Land op der Spëtzt vun Ris Wal Schwäif Skulptur

Hollännesch Metro Zuch Crashland op der Spëtzt vun enger riseger Walschwanz Skulptur
Hollännesch Zuch Crash-Land op der Spëtzt vun Ris Wal Schwäif Skulptur
schrëftlech vun Den Harry Johnson

A wayward metro train has crashed through the stop barrier at the De Akkers metro station in the Dutch city of Spijkenisse, only to be saved from plunging to the ground by a piece of modern art.

In a bizarre incident train crashed through the station barrier at roughly 12.30am on Monday. Thankfully, there were no passengers on board at the time of the incident, and the driver was somehow unharmed. 

Photos and video from the scene show the train’s undercarriage was torn away by the impressive twin whale tailfin sculptures titled ‘Saved by a Whale’s Tail’, which extend some 25 feet into the sky.

The driver was taken to hospital as a precaution, but reportedly suffered no injuries. The same cannot be said for the train, however, the rear windows of which were smashed in, several carriages having been mangled in the midnight mayhem. 

The city authorities now face the tricky task of extricating the train from its precarious perch atop the giant artwork, which is fittingly named ‘Saved by a Whale’s Tail’. What are the odds…?!

“It will be quite an exercise. It will take some time,” a police spokesperson told local media.

“There are two tails. If the metro had hit that other tail, I think it would have fallen through. Sure, it looks poetic, but it’s really a stroke of luck that the train is carried by the tail,” said Maarten Struijs, the artist and architect who created the whales.

An investigation into the circumstances of the crash and how the train flew so far off the rails is currently underway. According to Dutch media, the driver was arrested and brought in for questioning, but this is standard police procedure.

WAT VUN DESEN ARTIKEL WEI HUELEN:

  • A wayward metro train has crashed through the stop barrier at the De Akkers metro station in the Dutch city of Spijkenisse, only to be saved from plunging to the ground by a piece of modern art.
  • Sure, it looks poetic, but it's really a stroke of luck that the train is carried by the tail,” said Maarten Struijs, the artist and architect who created the whales.
  • The city authorities now face the tricky task of extricating the train from its precarious perch atop the giant artwork, which is fittingly named ‘Saved by a Whale's Tail'.

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Iwwer den Auteur

Den Harry Johnson

Den Harry Johnson war den Aufgabeeditor fir eTurboNews fir méi wéi 20 Joer. Hie lieft zu Honolulu, Hawaii, an ass ursprénglech aus Europa. Hie genéisst d'Noriichten ze schreiwen an ze decken.

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