Katastrophenbucht
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__NOTOC__ The Katastrophenbucht (″disaster bay″) is a bay on Lake Zug in the city of Zug. Its name derives from a catastrophe in a shore part called ''Vorstadt'', in which the lake shore broke on 5 July 1887 and flooded residential buildings.


Description

The Katastrophenbucht is about 150 meters long and extends about 70 meters into the shore. It covers the area of the bridge ''Vorstadtbrücke'', which is flanked to the west of the landing stage ''Zug Bahnhofsteg'' of the Zugersee Schifffahrt, and to the east of the ''Rigiecke''. It is part of the boulevard ''Vorstadt''. In 1998, designed the 112-meter-long bay front with '' Trompe-l'œil'', a color field painting: three warm and two cold color fields (or vice versa) face each other. Twenty-one hues have been contrasted in such a way that the colors of warm yellow-orange on the side of the ''Vorstadtquai'', into violet, green and red, and finally the direction of the ''Alpenquai'' run into a cool blue. Cogliatti arranged the colored surfaces together to create illusionist interruptions, niches and windows in the wall, creating an imaginary living and living space, a ″colorful city″. Behind the bay is the Rigiplatz, whose artistic conception by Anton Egloff (1995) is also reminiscent of the 1887 catastrophe.


History

The ''Vorstadt'' (an ancient suburb of Zug) was built on geotechnically unstable sea chalk. The East-West Railway Company wanted to realize a quaiproject there from the 1860s. The project contract went to the engineer
Franz Karl Stadlin Franz may refer to: People * Franz (given name) * Franz (surname) Places * Franz (crater), a lunar crater * Franz, Ontario, a railway junction and unorganized town in Canada * Franz Lake, in the state of Washington, United States – see Fran ...
,
Karl Pestalozzi Karl may refer to: People * Karl (given name), including a list of people and characters with the name * Karl der Große, commonly known in English as Charlemagne * Karl Marx, German philosopher and political writer * Karl of Austria, last Austrian ...
prepared a first report for this project, and the construction projects of the ''Quaianlage'' were politically discussed for decades. In the 1880s, the works began. Cracks on the shore prompted the city council to instruct the engineers
Albert Heim Albert Heim (12 April 184931 August 1937) was a Swiss geologist, noted for his three-volume ''Geologie der Schweiz''. Born in Zürich, he was educated at Zürich and Berlin universities. Very early in life he became interested in the physical fe ...
and
Robert Moser Robert D. Moser is an American Professor of engineering, noted for his studies of spectral methods, turbulence, and uncertainty quantification. He is the W. A. “Tex” Moncrief Jr. Chair in Computational Engineering and Sciences and is profes ...
with a technical analysis, which was completed in July 1884; their report strongly criticized the project. Because of the influence of the municipal minister of construction Clemens Henggeler, the critical report of Heim and Moser were hardly discussed in the city council, and the work was continued. On the day of the catastrophe, 5 July 1887, the subsoil lost its strength at the site of the Quai. In the afternoon, several buildings collapsed on the shore, several people died. A second flooding followed in the evening: Shortly before seven o'clock the walls of the suburb of Zug ''Vorstadt'' faltered, the inhabitants fled in panic as the houses collapsed and sank in the lake. In total, eleven people died, about 650 people were homeless, and 35 buildings were destroyed. A bay about 150 meters long opened up, which reached about 70 meters into the land. In the bay roofs of sunken houses looked out, household goods, beams and furniture swam in the lake. The breakthrough caused a huge wave, which washed a steamship ashore. After a few days,
disaster tourism Disaster tourism is the practice of visiting locations at which an environmental disaster, either natural or man-made, has occurred. Although a variety of disasters are the subject of subsequent disaster tourism, the most common disaster tourist ...
began; onlookers, who came from far away, were driven on ships to the demolition zone for 40 Centimes. In the northern area of the disaster zone, a memorial stone with a poem by
Isabelle Kaiser Isabelle Kaiser (2 October 1866, in Beckenried – 17 February 1925, in Beckenried) was a Swiss writer who produced works in the French and German languages. She received the prize of the French Academy French (french: français(e), link=no) may ...
remembers since 1887 to the disaster. Following the disaster, the Rigiplatz was realized by Robert Moser in 1891. In addition, the surrounding houses were demolished at the "Neue Quai" and created the Rössliwiese for security reasons. In the Cantonal Archives of the Canton of Zug there are numerous documents on the ''Katastrophenbucht''.


References


External links

{{Commons category
''Katastrophenbucht''
archival sources, doku-zug.ch Monuments and memorials in Switzerland Zug Lake Zug