Mexico Experts: Outdated Drain Caused July's Deadly Sinkhole
MEXICO CITY (AP) — A panel of experts in Mexico has determined that an old drainage pipe was to blame for a sinkhole on a major highway that killed two men last month when their car plunged into it.
The 34-year-old drain was not replaced as suggested before an expanded highway was built on top of it, the experts concluded in a report released Thursday.
The drain became clogged, and water backed up and apparently washed away the earth beneath the road.
Clemente Poon, Mexico’s highways director, cited “mistakes and omissions in the supervision and building” of the highway expansion.
Poon said the mistakes were made by “the companies responsible (for the project) and public servants.”
The sinkhole spanning two lanes opened in July near Cuernavaca, on the highway connecting Mexico City and the Pacific coast resort of Acapulco. The victims died after their car fell into the void.
“The study indicates that the design to build a roofed drainage canal was not followed,” Poon’s department said in a press statement. “If the designer’s proposal had been followed, surely the failure of the tube could have been avoided.”
Related News
From Archive
- Ohio trench collapse kills one worker, injures two during pipe installation
- Inside Sempra’s 72-mile pipeline with 18 major trenchless crossings
- Dominion proposes 186-mile underground HVDC power line across Virginia
- Trump vetoes bill to finish $1.3 billion Colorado water pipeline
- Infrastructure failure releases 100,000 gallons of wastewater in Houston; repairs ongoing
- Glenfarne Alaska LNG targets late-2026 construction start for 807-mile pipeline project
- Massive water line failure leaves majority of Waterbury without service
- Infrastructure failure releases 100,000 gallons of wastewater in Houston; repairs ongoing
- Construction jobs stumble into 2026 after weak year
- Worm-like robot burrows underground to cut power line installation costs

Comments