Historic Rotterdam bridge dismantled for Jeff Bezos’ superyacht
A historic bridge in Europe will be reduced to pieces after the builder of Jeff Bezos’ latest superyacht realised it would be too big to sail to the ocean.
A Dutch city has agreed to spend weeks taking down a historic bridge so Jeff Bezos’ new gigantic superyacht can reach the open seas later this year.
The Amazon founder’s 417-foot-long (127m), three-masted ship has cost roughly $US500 million ($A700 million) and is under construction in the Netherlands, the New York Post reported.
But the pleasure boat will be too tall to pass under Rotterdam’s landmark Koningshaven Bridge, which has a 39m clearance, according to the NL Times, which cited Dutch-language outlet Rijnmond.
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As a workaround, the megabillionaire and the boatmaker Oceano reportedly asked Rotterdam officials to temporarily dismantle the iconic bridge, and pledged to reimburse the city for expenses.
Taking apart and reassembling the middle section of the bridge known locally as “De Hef” was expected to take more than two weeks, the paper said.
Rotterdam officials touted Bezos’ pet project as a revenue generator.
“From an economic perspective and maintaining employment, the municipality considers this a very important project,” municipal project leader Marcel Walravens said.
“In addition, Rotterdam has also been declared the maritime capital of Europe. Shipbuilding and activity within that sector are therefore an important pillar of the municipality.”
Word of the planned deconstruction of the 1878 steel structure took a toll on preservation officials, who said the city pledged not to take apart De Hef again following a 2017 restoration.
“Employment is important, but there are limits to what you can and may do to our heritage,” Ton Wesselink of the Rotterdam Historical Society said.
Another local leader said bowing to Bezos was a “bridge too far,” as he issued a stern rebuke to some of Amazon’s reported business practices.
“This man has earned his money by structurally cutting staff, evading taxes, avoiding regulations and now we have to tear down our beautiful national monument?” Rotterdam politician Stephan Leewis wrote on Twitter.
The bridge was one of the first Rotterdam landmarks to be restored after the city was bombed in World War II.
It became obsolete after a tunnel was built for train traffic in 1993, but residents baulked at demolishing the span, and it was converted into a national monument, the paper reported.
Bezos’ Y721 superyacht will be one of the biggest sailing vessels ever made in the Netherlands, which is a hub for boat construction for the very wealthy, according to Bloomberg.
The yacht’s towering height has presented other problems for the world’s second-richest man.
The boat’s tall masts would present a hazard to helicopters, so the former Amazon CEO commissioned a support yacht with a helipad to follow in its wake, the outlet said.
This article originally appeared on the New York Post and was reproduced with permission