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What can be done in six days

Posted: April 13th, 2011, 4:57 pm
by A.E.
This is a picture of a Japanese highway after what the earthquake had done to it, and what it looked like six days later.....
Spoiler:
Image
I don't even have the faintest idea how they started repairing such destruction ???
Any ideas?



Courtesy of dailymail.co.uk

Re: What can be done in six days

Posted: April 13th, 2011, 5:05 pm
by Akonyl
well, from that picture we can't really see how much of the highway was wrecked, as in the first picture it looks like the section near the horizon was relatively untouched (and in the second picture, if you look closer to the horizon, the shoulder of the road there wasn't re-paved either because it didn't need to be), so it may have just been a relatively small section near this hill that got wrecked.

beyond that, it's a reasonable amount of work to break the road fragments, dispose of them, level out the terrain and re-pave/paint it. Not that it's trivial by any means, but it should be doable in 6 days.

part of what makes road maintenance (especially on highways) take a while is that it's done during night hours when there isn't much traffic so as to reduce the impact it has on commutes, but if the road's already destroyed, you don't have to worry about that. :P

not to mention, when something important like a highway needs to be fixed it gets done quicker. :V

Re: What can be done in six days

Posted: April 13th, 2011, 9:36 pm
by Emily
Where I live it takes like..months to simply pave a street, and they did this in 6 days? >:(

Good on them!

Re: What can be done in six days

Posted: April 14th, 2011, 12:14 am
by doublemoonlight
WOW in NZ it takes weeks to just mordernise ( or update) a short road.

good on you Japan

Re: What can be done in six days

Posted: April 14th, 2011, 9:26 am
by takiko
No idea how they made that but since it's Japan... Err, yeah.

I remember a story of an author (10 years ago)  that goes like this. She was laughing so hard because of a signage in Japan's airport saying something about "fright" instead of "freight." Someone from the airport asked her what's the matter and she told about the typo error. And the following day, when she came back, it was already fixed.

She quoted something like, "That's how efficient Japan is."