Highway collapse, Jingdong, China, 03.11.25
Building Collapse in Manchester, UK
October 17, 2025, a playground collapsed at Zijiang School in Shaoyang City, Hunan Province, fortunately no casualties were reported. The Zijiang School playground collapse emergency response headquarters announced on Saturday that they have begun an investigation to the cause.
The emergency response headquarters confirmed that the west wall and some playgrounds of the campus of the school collapsed, and the corners of the west side of the Boxue Building (teaching building) were damaged.
ZETATALK: THE STRETCH ZONE, THAT SINKING FEELING
ZetaTalk explores the concept of Earth's "stretch zones"—regions where tectonic plates are being pulled apart due to planetary forces, particularly in anticipation of a predicted pole shift. It focuses heavily on the eastern seaboard of the U.S., the Caribbean, and parts of Europe, warning that these areas will experience significant land subsidence due to the widening of the Atlantic Rift.
Key points include:
Historical evidence of submerged forests and civilizations off the U.S. East Coast and Bermuda.
Predictions that areas like Florida, Georgia, and the UK will lose elevation and be permanently flooded.
A detailed catalog of sinkholes, train derailments, infrastructure collapses, and mysterious odors from 2004–2005, interpreted as signs of Earth stretching.
The concept of “imploding cities”, where underground infrastructure fails due to shifting rock layers.
Warnings to relocate from vulnerable coastal and low-lying areas before the pole shift occurs.
Comment
http://www.buxtonadvertiser.co.uk/news/local/car_crushed_as_wall_co...
Flood Damage: Windsor Road in Fairfield remains closed after the collapse of a front garden wall and damage to a parked car following overnight rain.
Thursday 13 October 2011 12:34
TONNES of masonry and earth crashed on to a busy pedestrian route in Buxton this week, crushing one car and damaging another.
Heavy rain caused a landslide which led to a retaining wall at a property on Windsor Road to collapse onto a Vauxhall Astra and a Ford Fiesta at just after 10pm on Tuesday night. And parts of the wall, which was around eight foot tall, had also fallen into the road, which remained closed as the Buxton Advertiser went to press.
The Vauxhall Astra was written off by the impact. However, no one was injured. The wall was the border of the garden at the property.
Despite a bright start to October, when the weather was unseasonably warm, the High Peak has suffered torrential rain for several days. And the Buxton Weather website shows that 92mm of rain has already fallen in the first two weeks of the month compared to 110mm for the whole of the month of October last year. The Met Office are predicting drier spells in the next few days.
The heavy rain has also seen levels of the River Wye in the Pavilion Gardens rise significantly.
And with the weather set to get more unsettled as winter approaches, insurance price comparison site Confused.com last week revealed that storm-related home insurance claims have risen by 68 per cent overall in the last year.
Research by the company showed that storms, lightning strikes and falling trees are among the issues claimed for over the last 12 months and the company are reminding people to check their home insurance policies to make sure they are covered for adverse weather.
http://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/news/at-a-glance/main-section/wall_c...
Published on Wednesday 12 October 2011 03:09
Drivers in Sheffield ran into traffic chaos yesterday afternoon after a high stone wall on one of the city’s major roads collapsed.
The 6ft wall, which runs alongside King Edward VII School and Language College in Broomhill, fell down at about 1.45pm.
Rubble was left strewn across much of Glossop Road and covering sections of pavement next to a bus stop.
No one was injured in the incident.
Vinci Construction is currently carrying out major works at the secondary school under Sheffield’s Building Schools for the Future scheme. The works, being carried out in three phases, include refurbishment of its grade II-listed building, and new buildings including a sports hall and science, technology, engineering and maths (Stem) centre.
The collapse exposed gas pipes in Glossop Road and led to the road being closed to traffic heading towards the city centre.
Drivers heading towards Sheffield were diverted via Whitham Road and Western Bank.
CEDAR CITY — A massive weekend landslide closed a state highway east of Cedar City and is forcing Utah transportation officials to the sky to map the damage.
Utah Department of Transportation Officials say the slide happened over a section of state Route 14 about eight miles east of Cedar City. It is 1,700 feet in length and moved over 100 feet down slope, containing roughly 1.5 million cubic yards of dirt, rock, vegetation and debris. In one location, transportation officials report, the slide is 100 feet deep and it will likely take three to four months before the roadway reopens.
The landslide has the Cedar City/Brian Head Tourism Bureau suggesting alternate routes for travelers. Visitors and travelers wishing to see Cedar Breaks National Monument, state Route 143 via Parowan and Brian Head offers a direct route to several views before connecting to state Route 148. Although the visitor center and campground services are now closed at Cedar Breaks, the viewpoints will remain open until the road closes after snowfall prohibits traffic to the area.
From the north, another access point to Bryce Canyon from I-15 is state Route 20. That route connects to U.S. 89 and state Route 12 to Bryce Canyon.

Wall collapse at King Edward VII School
Published on Wednesday 12 October 2011 03:34
WITNESSES heard a deep rumbling noise before an entire section of pavement next to a Sheffield bus stop collapsed into the ground yesterday.
Nobody was waiting at the normally busy bus stop when the pavement started to crack and the footpath disappeared.
The landslide happened as a three metre section of stone wall forming a boundary to King Edward VII upper school fell down - and took the pavement on Glossop Road in Broomhill down with it.
The school is currently undergoing £22 million of construction work, refurbishment and rebuilding.
Cheryl Wall, from the Hallamshire Physiotherapy Clinic opposite, said: “There is a very big gap where the pavement has collapsed. It’s amazing no-one was standing at the bus stop at the time.”
A worker at The Rutland Hotel across the road said she had heard a rumbling noise before the pavement fell in and the wall collapsed at around 1.45pm yesterday.
“It’s a biggish section of wall and the pavement next to it has just gone,” she said.
One lane of Glossop Road heading to Broomhill had to be closed while the area was sealed off, and police diversions were put in place along Whitham Road. The road had to be shut for a further 15 minutes yesterday evening so another section of unsafe wall could be demolished.
First buses diverted journeys from Fulwood via Endcliffe and Clarkehouse Road, omitting Broomhill, and doubling back to serve the hospital.
King Edward VII headteacher Bev Jackson said workers from the school’s contractors, Vinci, had been monitoring the wall every day to check there had been no movement caused by the building works.
“It’s a mystery - although there has been a lot of rain this week on dry ground and that could be a factor,” she said.
“There’s a lot of rubble which has fallen down towards the school but that is all. But it is lucky that no-one was working in the area and that no-one was at the bus stop.”
She said the collapse appeared to be a ‘freak of nature
http://www.thestar.co.uk/community/first_a_rumble_then_pavement_nex...
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/nagpur/School-wall-collapse...
NAGPUR: Four students were injured when a seven-foot high compound wall of Manoramabai Mundle Dharampeth Marathi Primary School on North Ambazari road collapsed on Tuesday.
One of the injured, 12-year-old Shruti Harde, received serious head injuries and her face was fractured. Shrutias condition is stated to be critical and is battling for for life at a private hospital at Shankar Nagar.
The incident took place around 11.45 am when Shruti and her friends were playing near the compound wall. Shruti, though a seventh standard student of Dharampeth Tarkunde Boysa High School and Junior College, was playing on the premises of Manoramabai Mundle Dharampeth Marathi Primary School.
The school authorities informed that since the school is a centre for 10th board exam, pre-primary classes get over by 11 am. After school, Shruti, who has been staying with her uncle at SRPF camp, was waiting for SRPF bus.
The campuses of primary, pre-primary and junior college are connected to each other. Shruti and her friends went to play on the primary school premises, said Sudha Raut, principal of primary school.
According to an eyewitness Mahesh Shende, Shruti was trying to climb the wall and suddenly the wall collapsed. Her friends escaped with minor injuries but Shruti was trapped under the debris of collapsed wall. asBricks showered on her head and face. Except part of her legs, she was buried under bricks,a? said Mahesh, who immediately rescued the girl by removing the bricks from her face.
The school authorities rushed injured Shruti to a private hospital.
School calls it mere accident, parents blame authorities
Alka PanseNagpur: The parents of Shruti Harde, who was critically injured during wall collapse of Manoramabai Mundle Dharampeth Marathi Primary School, blamed old and weak compound wall responsible for the accident. However, the school authorities termed it just an accident and declined to accept that the wall collapsed due to poor maintenance.
story continues...
View full sizeExpress-Times File Photo | AL KRATZERSinkholes have opened up behind and under Big Woody's in Forks Township, a sports bar and restaurant in a strip shopping center on Sullivan Trail. Big Woody’s Sports Bar and Restaurant is on track to open by the end of the month, according to its landlord.
The business in the Sullivan Trail strip mall near Zucksville Road closed in August after sinkholes opened up in the parking lot.
Landlord Joe Posh previously said he would be seeking help with repair costs from the Easton Suburban Water Authority if the holes opened up due to a water main break. They opened up around the time of torrential rains from Hurricane Irene, and may have opened due to the stormwater.
Posh said Monday the cracks in the business’ siding and undermining its foundation could be a sign of damage caused by ruptured water lines.
“It’s a sign of a washout from some things,” he said. “We are still assessing it.”
The cluster of cracks and cavities — about seven of them — are yet to be filled in and cover about 50 to 60 square feet behind the strip mall, Posh said.
An Easton Suburban Water Authority spokesman did not immediately return a phone call seeking comment.
About 2,000 gallons of water were lost due to a main break on the site. The restaurant cannot reopen until a structural engineer determines it is safe.
Trevor Wayward, professional geologist with Gilmore & Associates, assessed the damage in August on behalf of the township. He said several factors could cause foundations to unsettle, including the underlying bedrock in the Lehigh Valley, a limestone corridor. Wayward said there are definite sinkhole-related features in the road near the Big Woody’s property,
Township Manager Richard Schnaedter said the water authority could be to blame for the holes.
Posh has since hired Earth Engineering Inc. to assess damage. Paul J. Creneti, director at Earth Engineering, did not immediately return a phone call for comment.
Geologists have estimated it would cost at least $50,000 to repair the damage.
The other merchants in the strip mall — Supercuts, Ivy Cleaners, a vacant building that had housed CC Wireless and Jasmine Japanese and Thai Cuisine — have reopened. Posh said Big Woody’s owners are remodeling the interior and exterior of the building.
http://www.lehighvalleylive.com/easton/index.ssf/2011/10/engineers_...

Aaron Gilchrist
A sinkhole in Stafford, Va. has already swallowed several decks and now threatens to destroy homes. News4's Aaron Gilchrist learned how the community is helping to save the homes.
A sinkhole that opened up early last month in Stafford is growing, and threatens to swallow up two homes.
Ora Barnes and Dan O'Leary, who own the two houses on Brush Everard Court, are hoping an engineering firm can offer them a solution to the slow-moving landslide. The sliding dirt has already swept most of their backyards down hill.
The sinkhole, approximately 100-feet wide and 30-feet deep, developed after days of heavy rain in early September.
Stafford County officials deemed the so hole so dangerous the two homes have been condemned. In the second week of September, a chain link fence topped by barbed wire went up around both properties, to keep curious onlookers from wandering around back and falling off the cliff.
Geotechnical engineers are on site drilling 65 foot deep holes to take soil and water samples to try to figure out what to do next. The evaluation will cost $15,000.
The homeowners said after consulting attorneys, they have discovered the monetary burden to fix the problem is all on them. A local church, Ebenezer United Methodist, has come to their aid, collecting donations.
The engineers' evaluation could take several weeks.
http://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/Growing-Sinkhole-Threatens-...
http://www.thestar.com/news/article/1067886--1-dead-2-trapped-after...

Police said that the excavating equipment toppled on a construction site on York Blvd. near Keele St. and that the incident was classified as an industrial accident..
CTV TorontoOne person was killed and five others injured after a piece of construction equipment collapsed at York University.
Emergency Medical Services confirmed that one worker at the scene died.
That worker and another were initially trapped beneath the equipment, which collapsed at a construction site on York Blvd. near Keele St. at about 2:40 p.m. on Tuesday, police said.
The worker who was trapped but alive was freed by emergency workers and transported to Sunnybrook hospital, police said.
The accident happened at the site of the future subway station at the university, Toronto Transit Commission spokesman Brad Ross confirmed.
“It is our project but we contracted the work out,” he said.
A contractor has been working on the University-Spadina extension line at York U for months.
Ross said he did not yet know how many workers were at the scene when the accident happened. “We know they were doing excavation.”
The accident is causing traffic and transit disruptions. Police said Steeles Ave. is open, but drivers can expect delays as traffic clears the area during rush hour.
The campus TTC bus loop at York and Ian MacDonald Blvds. is closed, and the following routes are diverting or letting off passengers near the school: 35E, 41, 60, 106, 107, 108 and 196.
An Ornge medical helicopter landed in a field at the southeast corner of Keele St. and Steeles Ave. at 3:15 p.m. It is expected to leave shortly.
An inspector from the provincial Ministry of Labour is at the scene, said a spokesperson. An engineer will also be deployed, added William Lin.

News: Bringing you news 24-hours a day.
Published on Tuesday 11 October 2011 12:49
COMMUTERS suffered delays this afternoon after a busy main road was partially closed when a section of wall collapsed at the boundary of a Sheffield school.
A three metre section of wall fell down and part of the pavement disappeared by a bus stop on Glossop Road, next to King Edward VII upper school in Broomhill.
No one was injured in the incident.
One lane of the road going up to Broomhill is closed with diversions put in place by police along Whitham Road.
http://www.thestar.co.uk/news/local/barnsley/road_delays_after_wall...
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After a weekend of heavy rain, sinkholes form at three Marion County schools and one home.
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MARION COUNTY, Fla. -- After a weekend of heavy rain, sinkholes formed at three Marion County schools and one home, where a sport utility vehicle was swallowed.The school board said the most serious is at the bus loop of Ward Highlands Elementary School.The other two are at Vanguard High School and Howard Middle School. Both are in retention pond areas and have been roped off.All three schools will remain open.Meanwhile, Beth Antis, said her family is waiting until Tuesday to try to tow her Dodge Durango out of the huge sinkhole in her driveway.She said she heard cracking around 5 a.m. Monday and then water gushing into the hole.She said the water that had flooded her front yard, gushed into the hole."It sounded like Niagara Falls," Antis said.She said they were told it's too dangerous to stay in the house.
Nancy Lieder, Emissary of the Zetas.
https://poleshift.ning.com/xn/detail/3863141:Comment:1168188
Awakening to the Alien Presence ZetaTalk
The truth will likely never to be known to the public but be washed away in the Nibiru panic soon to engulf the world.
The Worst of the Cover-Up
https://poleshift.ning.com/profiles/blogs/the-worst-of-the-cover-up
Main Establishment Lies
https://poleshift.ning.com/profiles/blogs/main-establishment-lies
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