You can’t park there, sir.
The Maryland Transport Authority confirms that all lanes have been closed in both directions due to an "incident" on the Francis Scott Key Bridge in the US city of Baltimore.
agreed. I guess it would be less likely to happen in daylight though.Thank goodness it happened in the middle of the night
agreed. I guess it would be less likely to happen in daylight though.
God knows what the skipper / pilot was doing. When i heard the reports, I’d pictured a ship accidentally clipping a support, and a domino effect bring the bridge down. The reality is plain weird - it just ploughs straight into the support as if nobody was actually paying any attention at all
Reports of several vehicles in the water according to various news outlets.from slowmo footage looks like fortunatly no traffic at the time, a lorry and couple of car cross a minute before. unfortunatly some service engineers were there.
From the BBC:agreed. I guess it would be less likely to happen in daylight though.
God knows what the skipper / pilot was doing. When i heard the reports, I’d pictured a ship accidentally clipping a support, and a domino effect bring the bridge down. The reality is plain weird - it just ploughs straight into the support as if nobody was actually paying any attention at all
People on Twitter saying that at real speed, rather than the speeded up footage on the likes of the BBC it looks like a total power loss, possibly twice.From the BBC:
"Its speed steadily increased and it maintained a straight route south east along the Patapsco River.
Then at 01:25 MarineTraffic data shows that the ship suddenly diverted from its straight course and began to slow down.
Around this time, video shows that all lights on the exterior of the ship suddenly turned off and smoke began emanating smoke from the ship's funnel."
Sounds like possibly a serious ship malfunction?
I've got Sky News playing in the background. Some sort of expert they were interviewing just now suggested the ship's engines were essentially on full reverse which he described as an attempted "emergency stop".From the BBC:
"Its speed steadily increased and it maintained a straight route south east along the Patapsco River.
Then at 01:25 MarineTraffic data shows that the ship suddenly diverted from its straight course and began to slow down.
Around this time, video shows that all lights on the exterior of the ship suddenly turned off and smoke began emanating smoke from the ship's funnel."
Sounds like possibly a serious ship malfunction?
Serious ship malfunction thenPeople on Twitter saying that at real speed, rather than the speeded up footage on the likes of the BBC it looks like a total power loss, possibly twice.
Smoke from the chimney - and looking at the clip on the BBC, the ship seems pretty engulfed in black smoke - so could have been an explosion which could have been caused by terrorists - but to time an explosion at precisely the moment to cause the collision with the bridge? Pushing it a bit, I'd have thought.Then again, some on Twitter are also saying it's terrorism, which seems very unlikely with two pilots on board and the bridge at it's quietest, but you get all sorts on that platform.
There's the problem then. They should have used sailors.BBC said that there were two pilots on board