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Berlin Brandenburg: The Airport with Half a Million Faults

Accepted submission by SemperOSS at 2019-07-01 13:47:42 from the You-Thought-Your-Builders-Were-Bad dept.
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Stories about seriously mangled public infrastructure projects keep coming up and even the alleged super-efficient Germans are not exempt. But what would you expect when you change and expand the project while it is being implemented and when you use smaller contractors with no track record for projects like this? BBC has the story [bbc.co.uk]:

As a structure, it looks impressive enough.

Until you pause, look around you, and absorb the silence. This is Berlin Brandenburg or BER, the new, state-of-the-art international airport built to mark reunified Germany's re-emergence as a global destination.

It is a bold new structure, costing billions, and was supposed to be completed in 2012.

But it has never opened.

BER has become for Germany not a new source of pride but a symbol of engineering catastrophe. It's what top global infrastructure expert Bent Flyvbjerg calls a "national trauma" and an ideal way "to learn how not to do things".

[...]

New construction boss Hartmut Mehdorn made a list of all the faults and failures[...].

The final total was 550,000 — more than a half a million problems to fix.

Maybe that builder, who left a big hole in your dining room wall for a couple of weeks, wasn't so bad after all? It wasn't like seven years later, was it?


Original Submission