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Why Did Anyone Think This Was A Good Way To Travel From Point A To Point B?

a cartoon of a house and boxes

If you want to get from one place to another, you have lots of options, depending on the circumstances. Plane. Ship. Train. Car. Horseback, maybe. Sometimes, if it’s not that far, people just walk.

In the resort town of Estepona, located on Spain’s Costa del Sol, it was a ten-minute walk to get between two particular streets, Avenida Reina Sofia and Calle Eslovaquia. So in the interest of saving time, they built a much faster way to get from one street to another, to avoid the 10-minute walk.

They built a slide. A 125ft slide.

There was only one problem, though…

It had an approximate 34-degree gradient, which was so steep that people were hurtling down way too fast and getting hurt, either with “road rash” from the ride down, or from their “crash landing.”

Gee, ya think?

(Note: the first couple of sliders in this video went down slowly but after that, people seem to speed up a whole lot)

Some creative people took to Twitter after hearing about the “shortcut” between the two streets:

^^^ Translation: “Of the creators of the slide of Estepona…”

^^ Translation: “I do not know what happens faster: If you go down the slide of Estepona, or the weekend.”

There were also the Tweets from the woman who claimed she experienced the slide…

^^^ Translation: “The slide of Estepona is a s***, seen and proven. I threw myself and I hurt everywhere, I flew 2 meters and the cops started to laugh”

^^^ Translation: “These are my elbows, I do not put picture of my a** but this worse.”

Not surprisingly, the €280,000 (more than $313,000) stainless steel slide was closed less than 24 hours after it was open to the public, so the Estepona Town Hall could carry out a review. A statement from Estepona Town Hall read: “The city council orders a complementary revision and preventive closing of the slide whose approval and safety had been certified by the specialist installation company.”

The Aftermath

An undated post on Andalucia.com explained what happened in the wake of closing the slide.

The post explained that after the slide was closed, the mayor of Estepona said on TV about a month later that it would be replaced with a better one. But that apparently never happened.

…the slide was suddenly removed by the construction company early on the morning of 7th August. Estepona town hall distanced themselves from the slide that had ‘discredited’ Estepona and from the removal by the installation company who had been asked to conduct a safety review of its own slide and the safety certification.

So that was the end of that.

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This post first appeared on Your Mileage May Vary

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