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New drainage being laid on beach road


Ling Kae

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If anyone has witnessed the flash-flood flow from the higher 2nd road, down the Beach Road sois, across Beach Road, the sand and into the sea, where one cannot really tell where the flood water stops and where the sea begins, then you will know that this pipe, running broadly north-south at sea-level, won't do anything to help.

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2 hours ago, NanLaew said:

If anyone has witnessed the flash-flood flow from the higher 2nd road, down the Beach Road sois, across Beach Road, the sand and into the sea, where one cannot really tell where the flood water stops and where the sea begins, then you will know that this pipe, running broadly north-south at sea-level, won't do anything to help.

A pipe without an incline is as much use as a ditch closed at both ends. Not sure what they can do with this pipe, or what the plan is. 

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13 minutes ago, Ling Kae said:

Then why bother? This looks like an expensive project, not to mention the traffic being slowed down to one lane.

You  answered your own question with your 'expensive project' comment.

 

Nice little earner..........

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Well, if they connect this stormwater discharge to the higher landscape and make sure that everyone has sufficiently large stormwater wells and pipes, it can work. But nothing indicates that they have thought so far. Other questions are how often they intend to clear those and how far out in the sea the rainwater is supposed to be released or how much it is purified before then. I am not particularly surprised if they have not thought of such things.

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6 hours ago, Max69xl said:

How come posters start complaing even before the project is finished? We have to wait and see if it works.

Because we have seen it all before. It floods so city hall decides to do something. So far in the last 20 years nothing has worked.

 

They had soi honey dug up and laying drains for nearly a year, nothing changed.  Then they laid in massive drains at the end of soi 6, didn't work. Right now even after that build they still have 3 ugly machines they turn on to push the water out. This is right next to the Buddhist Shirne, what an eyesore.

 

Then they decided to put in dips on the promenade which are at road level. This would be a safety hazard in any other country in the world but Thailand decides this is ok. Don't worry about people in wheelchairs,  nobody cares.

 

So ask yourself this, have they ever got anything correct? Then you will know why people are sceptical. 

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where is this picture taken ?????  very sad situation.
Regarding the picture. You can't destroy the sand hills behind the beach. Once you do (by construction too close to the beach) you start the beginning of the end for the beach as locals have known it. Sand migrates 100's of Km up and down the coast, so a small beach/sand dune modification anywhere can effect another area many Km away ...over time. Trouble is polutitions and developers can't wait.


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18 hours ago, Ling Kae said:

Then why bother? This looks like an expensive project, not to mention the traffic being slowed down to one lane.

There was a huge kickback involved. Hell, doesn't matter if it works or not.

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7 hours ago, Ling Kae said:

Because we have seen it all before. It floods so city hall decides to do something. So far in the last 20 years nothing has worked.

 

They had soi honey dug up and laying drains for nearly a year, nothing changed.  Then they laid in massive drains at the end of soi 6, didn't work. Right now even after that build they still have 3 ugly machines they turn on to push the water out. This is right next to the Buddhist Shirne, what an eyesore.

 

Then they decided to put in dips on the promenade which are at road level. This would be a safety hazard in any other country in the world but Thailand decides this is ok. Don't worry about people in wheelchairs,  nobody cares.

 

So ask yourself this, have they ever got anything correct? Then you will know why people are sceptical. 

I repeat,wait and see if it works before you start complaining. 

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On ‎9‎/‎11‎/‎2019 at 3:59 PM, NanLaew said:

If anyone has witnessed the flash-flood flow from the higher 2nd road, down the Beach Road sois, across Beach Road, the sand and into the sea, where one cannot really tell where the flood water stops and where the sea begins, then you will know that this pipe, running broadly north-south at sea-level, won't do anything to help.

I disagree. The already existing drains which are about the same size did the job back in the 90s. That they no longer do, is probably because they are full of garbage and sand, and one wonders if they were connected when the road was widened.

The only practical solution, IMO, is to have really big drains collecting water at the base of every soi coming down from Second Road and going straight out to sea, but there isn't any money to be made from something that works, as it doesn't have to be replaced every few years, and that's not how Pattaya works.

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21 hours ago, carlyai said:

Regarding the picture. You can't destroy the sand hills behind the beach. Once you do (by construction too close to the beach) you start the beginning of the end for the beach as locals have known it. Sand migrates 100's of Km up and down the coast, so a small beach/sand dune modification anywhere can effect another area many Km away ...over time. Trouble is polutitions and developers can't wait.


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??????? There are no "sand hills" behind the beach. There was a raised area that the promenade was laid on.

BYW, all that "land" was reclaimed when they built a proper road along the beach decades ago.

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11 hours ago, Banana7 said:

That pipe looks like it is made from ABS plastic and is being buried underneath a high traffic volume roadway. Do any engineers know if that pipe can handle the weight and not collapse under the weight of loaded buses, cement trucks, etc.?

 

So I went and checked this out today. They are placing these pipes in a reinforced concrete frame. Then they seem to be putting a concrete lid on the top once laid. Here are some pics. Note: the concrete frames are more than 2 meters hight and wide.

 

 

20190913_063813.jpg

20190913_064006.jpg

20190913_063920.jpg

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