The Niagara Falls Review

Whale tail sculpture catches runaway train

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SPIJKENISS­E, NETHERLAND­S — This really was a fluke.

The driver of a metro train escaped injury when the front carriage rammed through the end of an elevated section of rails and was caught by a sculpture of a whale’s tail near the Dutch port city of Rotterdam.

The train was left perched upon one of two tail fins known as “flukes” several metres above the ground.

It created such a stir locally that authoritie­s urged sightseers to stay away. Even so, some 50 people were at the scene late Monday morning as engineers tried to work out how to stabilize and then remove the train amid strengthen­ing winds.

“A team of experts is investigat­ing how we can make it safe and get it down,” Carly Gorter, a spokespers­on for the local security authority, said.

“It’s tricky,” she added. The architect who designed the sculpture, Maarten Struijs, told Dutch broadcaste­r RTL he was pleased that it likely saved the life of the driver.

“I’m surprised it’s so strong,” he said. “If plastic has been standing for 20 years, you don’t expect it to hold a metro carriage.”

The company that operates the metro line said the driver was uninjured and there were no passengers on the train when it crashed through stop barriers at the end of the station in the town of Spijkeniss­e, on the southern edge of Rotterdam, early Monday.

Authoritie­s launched an investigat­ion into how the train could plow through the barrier at the end of the rail tracks.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Experts are trying to figure out how to get the train down from the sculpture safely.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Experts are trying to figure out how to get the train down from the sculpture safely.

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