The Japan Times - Arid Athens turns to ancient aqueduct as climate crisis bites

EUR -
AED 3.817323
AFN 76.252376
ALL 98.850653
AMD 414.401309
ANG 1.868661
AOA 947.837726
ARS 1097.875709
AUD 1.660336
AWG 1.870733
AZN 1.761529
BAM 1.95442
BBD 2.093452
BDT 125.971021
BGN 1.950566
BHD 0.391686
BIF 3069.871299
BMD 1.039296
BND 1.403264
BOB 7.16394
BRL 5.987798
BSD 1.036773
BTN 90.0421
BWP 14.351001
BYN 3.393052
BYR 20370.199615
BZD 2.082659
CAD 1.4865
CDF 2982.779603
CHF 0.943842
CLF 0.025911
CLP 994.335783
CNY 7.596266
CNH 7.589682
COP 4330.953869
CRC 524.774772
CUC 1.039296
CUP 27.541341
CVE 110.185581
CZK 25.059524
DJF 184.630475
DKK 7.458985
DOP 64.30015
DZD 140.530463
EGP 52.630058
ERN 15.589438
ETB 133.160012
FJD 2.407531
FKP 0.835234
GBP 0.833661
GEL 2.930548
GGP 0.835234
GHS 16.018223
GIP 0.835234
GMD 74.308138
GNF 8962.661006
GTQ 8.004231
GYD 217.130363
HKD 8.094816
HNL 26.433982
HRK 7.525926
HTG 135.810405
HUF 402.240741
IDR 17026.992568
ILS 3.716417
IMP 0.835234
INR 90.368597
IQD 1358.253674
IRR 43741.370959
ISK 146.789922
JEP 0.835234
JMD 163.26175
JOD 0.737383
JPY 159.903956
KES 134.176201
KGS 90.885861
KHR 4156.563958
KMF 493.198041
KPW 935.459909
KRW 1507.519334
KWD 0.320956
KYD 0.863998
KZT 522.915673
LAK 22543.618713
LBP 92864.146185
LKR 308.045378
LRD 206.840914
LSL 19.118456
LTL 3.068771
LVL 0.628659
LYD 5.108416
MAD 10.369576
MDL 19.528676
MGA 4826.637171
MKD 61.484472
MMK 2181.43933
MNT 3597.160975
MOP 8.317805
MRU 41.278616
MUR 48.347968
MVR 16.004126
MWK 1797.890616
MXN 21.431424
MYR 4.630031
MZN 66.408898
NAD 19.11818
NGN 1567.185104
NIO 38.15672
NOK 11.728636
NPR 144.079627
NZD 1.845946
OMR 0.400144
PAB 1.036768
PEN 3.847582
PGK 4.168397
PHP 60.325919
PKR 289.477422
PLN 4.168356
PYG 8158.355136
QAR 3.780375
RON 4.977656
RSD 117.097475
RUB 94.83397
RWF 1476.421065
SAR 3.898093
SBD 8.778895
SCR 14.940157
SDG 624.616801
SEK 11.289341
SGD 1.403772
SHP 0.855951
SLE 23.698115
SLL 21793.517575
SOS 592.607074
SRD 36.588429
STD 21511.326773
SVC 9.07168
SYP 13513.98125
SZL 19.116773
THB 35.217062
TJS 11.326936
TMT 3.637536
TND 3.303319
TOP 2.434138
TRY 37.538443
TTD 7.034099
TWD 34.10813
TZS 2702.169357
UAH 43.373181
UGX 3814.195763
USD 1.039296
UYU 44.927617
UZS 13467.48731
VES 63.662556
VND 26465.670061
VUV 128.522704
WST 2.948866
XAF 655.522358
XAG 0.03223
XAU 0.000356
XCD 2.808749
XDR 0.793847
XOF 655.497147
XPF 119.331742
YER 257.745893
ZAR 19.242249
ZMK 9354.918057
ZMW 29.004931
ZWL 334.652855
  • SCS

    0.1400

    12.07

    +1.16%

  • CMSC

    0.2550

    23.535

    +1.08%

  • RBGPF

    -0.8400

    64.01

    -1.31%

  • RELX

    0.4200

    51.86

    +0.81%

  • VOD

    -0.1450

    8.445

    -1.72%

  • JRI

    0.1010

    12.951

    +0.78%

  • AZN

    0.8130

    75.243

    +1.08%

  • GSK

    0.1950

    36.325

    +0.54%

  • BCE

    0.2800

    23.54

    +1.19%

  • RYCEF

    0.1400

    7.81

    +1.79%

  • RIO

    0.7800

    62.82

    +1.24%

  • BP

    0.1650

    34.845

    +0.47%

  • BCC

    0.7400

    119.46

    +0.62%

  • CMSD

    0.1500

    23.86

    +0.63%

  • BTI

    -3.8500

    38.89

    -9.9%

  • NGG

    0.4150

    60.995

    +0.68%

Arid Athens turns to ancient aqueduct as climate crisis bites
Arid Athens turns to ancient aqueduct as climate crisis bites / Photo: Angelos TZORTZINIS - AFP

Arid Athens turns to ancient aqueduct as climate crisis bites

Between parked cars in a suburban street in Athens, workers fix a pump to an ancient stone well that in turn accesses an aqueduct built almost 2,000 years ago.

Text size:

The Greek capital, one of Europe's hottest and most densely populated cities, is going to great lengths -- and depths -- to battle soaring summer temperatures and creaking infrastructure.

Officials are tapping European Union money to help restore access to Hadrian's Aqueduct, a 24-kilometre (15-mile) underground channel named after the Roman emperor who funded its construction in the year 140.

It is hailed by experts as an "engineering marvel".

Last year, public utility company Eydap repeatedly warned Athenians they needed to save drinking water as reserves shrank.

Eydap's Katerina Apostolopoulou, who manages the project in the Chalandri suburb, around 10 kilometres from central Athens, said the water would not be of drinking quality and instead would be used "to clean or to irrigate parks and gardens" in summer.

She pointed out that Athenians would normally need to use the drinking water network for their gardens and parks, so she hoped the new pump would help save the valuable resource.

- War shelter -

The aqueduct, which begins at the foot of Mount Parnitha, is fed by an aquifer, explained geologist Yannis Dafnos.

A gentle slope from the mountain helps the water flow down naturally into the city centre.

The Chalandri well is more than 20 metres deep and part of a network of 300 ancient wells, Dafnos said as he lifted the heavy iron cover.

George Sachinis, Eydap's director of strategy and innovation, called the aqueduct an "archaeological and engineering marvel".

He urged planners to use it to create more green spaces in a city hit hard by the climate crisis.

"It is one of the most important ancient aqueducts in Europe," he said.

The aqueduct helped supply the city for hundreds of years but fell into disuse after the Roman era.

Athenians began to reuse it at the end of the 19th century but it was abandoned again after two dams were constructed near the city.

During the Nazi occupation (1941-1944) and then the ensuing Greek civil war, one of the Chalandri wells that it is now dry was used as a shelter, said Christos Giovanopoulos, who heads Cultural Hidrant, a heritage management project at Chalandri town hall.

The restoration project is part of "the promotion of sustainable development in Athens", he said, adding that water was often wasted.

- 'Collaborates with nature' -

He said the Chalandri project aimed to promote green spaces and improve the microclimate through water recycling, while highlighting the archaeological and cultural importance of the entire monument.

A few years ago, Chalandri residents had to zigzag to avoid the well, which at the time was located in the middle of the street, Giovanopoulos said.

Now, the northern Athens suburb will be the first of eight municipalities in the Athens region to benefit from the reuse of the aqueduct's water.

An adjacent dry well has been fitted with a ladder to allow visitors to descend and view parts of the ancient conduit.

The aqueduct eventually reaches the centre of Athens at the foot of Lycabettus Hill, once the site of a Roman reservoir.

Only a few parts of the original reservoir construction remain. The existing structure with stone columns and arches is largely a reconstruction from the nineteenth century.

At the very bottom, in the ancient canal, "a few parts of the roof built by the Romans to prevent rocks from falling into the aqueduct remain", Sachinis said.

"It is an elegant piece of infrastructure that respects and collaborates perfectly with nature," he said.

"Thanks to this aqueduct, there are plans to create more green space around the original reservoir", he added.

T.Ikeda--JT