Budapest metro station to close, flood situation is ‘serious’ – PHOTOS

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The Budapest Transport Centre announced multiple changes concerning the Hungarian capital’s public transport system due to the peaking Danube. The authorities will close a busy metro station, and modify tram routes nr 1, 4, and 6. PM Viktor Orbán said at a today press briefing that the situation is “serious”, but Hungary is safe. The capital’s mayor, Gergely Karácsony, wrote in a Facebook post that they prepared Budapest for a 9-metre-high peaking.
According to Szeretlek Magyarország, BKK closed the passenger underpass on Clark Ádám Square yesterday. Such closures would continue in the next few days as the water level rises. Trams nr. 4 and 6 will commute more frequently, like trams on line 1. However, from today, tram nr 2 will carry passengers on a shorter route: it will commute only between the Kossuth Lajos Square (where the Hungarian Parliament is) and the Jászai Mari Square.

BKK said they would probably close the Battyány Square metro station on Friday. Metro trains will touch the station but will not stop there. Furthermore, authorities will place sandbags at the stairs of the H5 suburban railway underpass of the Batthyány Square and Margaret Bridge stations, so people will not be able to use them. Click HERE for additional traffic restrictions introduced because of the flood.
Mayor Karácsony warned potential ‘disaster tourists’
Gergely Karácsony, Budapest’s mayor, wrote in a Facebook post that they had prepared the city for a 9-metre-high peaking. He added that authorities finished 90% of the temporary dams and placed more than 500 thousand sandbags. Therefore, Budapest is ready for the peak.
Karácsony said they would like to protect the capital not only from the water but also from infections. Therefore, they increased the concentration of free chloride in the drinking water. It may happen that a further increase will be necessary later. Authorities began to operate a pump at the Buda side of the Chain Bridge. He also asked everybody not to get too close to the Danube. “No photo exists that is worth more than the people’s and Budapest’s safety”, he concluded.
According to infostart.hu, the Danube will peak in Budapest on Saturday at 850 cm, 41 cm lower than the 2013 level. However, the flood will only leave the country a week later. Thus, the dams will be under pressure for long. The peaking of the Danube already started in Nagybajcs at 850-855 cm. In 2013, that level was 908 cm. Gabriella Siklós, a spokeswoman for the General Directorate of Water Management, said a lot depends on how swiftly the snow would melt in Austria. For example, in Pozsony, the Danube is peaking for the second time.
PM Orbán: Hungary safe, despite ‘serious’ situation
Despite the seriousness of the flood, Hungary is safe, with sufficient equipment and manpower assigned to protection, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán told a press conference on Thursday. Defence lines have been raised to 9m on the full length of the protection area in Budapest, above the highest ever flood levels in the city, Orbán said. The weakest points, Margaret Island in the city centre and the neighbourhood of Batthyány Square on the Buda side, have also been fortified successfully, he said. Meanwhile, defence lines have been finished north of the capital in Dunabogdány and Tahitótfalu, and almost done at Leányfalu, Orbán said.
Sections of Road 2, leading north from Budapest along the Danube, will probably have to be closed on Friday, Orbán said. Kismaros, north of Budapest, was in a critical situation on Wednesday, but protection levels were on 100 percent there too, thanks to a deployment of the Armed Forces, he added. Barring unexpected events, the flood will leave Hungary with the Danube confined and kept between its barriers, Orbán said.
Stretch of areas under flood defence extended
The stretch of areas put under flood defence operations had to be extended, PM Orbán told a press conference on Thursday morning, on the seventh day of flood prevention in Hungary. The Danube is expected to recede slowly, he said, adding that no rain was in the forecast for the Austrian section of the river over the next seven days. The Danube is expected to peak on Thursday in the Dunaremete region, at Mosonmagyaróvár, in north-western Hungary, Orbán added.














