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Melbourne Rainbow house faces a big crisis or washed away by the waves

Melbourne Brighton Beach Rainbow house faces Wave erosion crisis (Pioneer Sun Photo)


(Brighton) 's iconic rainbow house in Brighton, Melbourne, is at risk of being washed away because of dredging, coastal erosion and surging waves.


According to the avant-garde Sun, Melbourne Brighton resident Joseph (Alison Joseph) said the waves continued to beat and destroy the foundation of the rainbow dressing house at the southern tip of (Dendy St Beach), a popular Dandi Street beach. A few decades ago, house, the beach dressing here, was washed away.

Joseph, who has lived here for years, is now worried that more rainbow house may be washed away.

It is understood that in March, a buyer paid A $335000 for 89 rainbow change houses with iconic koala murals. Just a week later, the house became a horror channel. Last week, new owners were forced to lay new foundations and plug the gap with sand.

Melbourne Brighton Beach Rainbow house faces Wave erosion crisis (Pioneer Sun Photo)


Tarbott (Jenny Talbot), Convenor of (Friends of the Brighton Dunes), a group friend of Brighton Dune, said coastal erosion had been a persistent problem, but the situation was getting worse after the dredging of the (Port Phillip Bay) channel in the port of Philip Bay deepened.

John Rundell, a member of the Brighton Beating Box Association, said he had not heard of any damage. But he admitted that there was a new part of the house "The danger of being eroded" at the southern tip of the beach.

The local parliament is working on erosion resistance by collecting gravel at the northern end of the beach and building sandbag walls to protect sand dunes behind the beach.

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