Sinkhole opens on a Chicago street. |
Schools were closed, commuter trains slowed to a crawl and a local emergency agency to the north, in Lake County, drafted jail inmates to fill sandbags.
The gaping sinkhole opened up a residential street on Chicago's South Side just before 5:30 a.m. after a cast iron water main dating back to 1915 broke during the massive storm.
The hole spanned the entire width of the road and chewed up grassy areas abutting the sidewalk. Two of the cars that disappeared inside had been parked, but a third was being driven when the road buckled and caved in. Only the hood of one of the vehicles could be seen peeking from the chasm.
The hole spanned the entire width of the road and chewed up grassy areas abutting the sidewalk. Two of the cars that disappeared inside had been parked, but a third was being driven when the road buckled and caved in. Only the hood of one of the vehicles could be seen peeking from the chasm.
The driver was taken to Northwestern Memorial Hospital with non-life threatening injuries, said Chicago Police Department spokesman Mike Sullivan.
Tom LaPorte, a spokesman for the city's water department, said the force of the heavy rain or the movement and weight of the rain-soaked ground could have caused the pipe to crack open.
In the street outside the Willis Tower, an overwhelmed sewer system sent water gushing geyser-like from manholes with such force it rattled the heavy covers.
"The water will come out any way it can," LaPorte said. He said there have been hundreds of reports of flooded basements.
Workers were furiously filling sand bags and putting up barricades along the north branch of the Chicago River in the Albany Park neighborhood in the hopes of keeping the river from rising over its banks, LaPorte said.
On roadways throughout the region, vehicles were stalled in standing water that was nearly up to car windshields in some places. On the Edens Expressway, flooding prompted the Illinois Department of Transportation to divert traffic onto other roads.
Several expressways have been at least partially closed, including the Eisenhower northbound lanes on the city's North Side. Some schools had to cancel classes because buses were unable to maneuver through flooded streets.
Around 550 flights in and out of O'Hare International Airport were canceled, according to the aviation tracking website FlightAware.com.
Thursday's storm drenched the airport with more than 5 inches of rain. The National
Weather Service said another band of storms could unload another 2 inches in the afternoon.
Weather Service said another band of storms could unload another 2 inches in the afternoon.
"We will have another line of strong thunderstorms going through south of the Chicago area, and behind that there is another area of widespread rain that will move through the area," meteorologist Andrew Crein said.
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