San Francisco’s iconic Golden Gate Bridge has found its voice… and it’s already driving some locals nuts. Â
The city’s helpline says the noise ― described as a whistle, hum, howl or even scream ― is caused by “high winds blowing through the newly installed railing slats along the bike path on the bridge.â€Â
It’s not constant, only when the winds are just right, as was the case on Friday:
It can be heard for miles throughout the City by the Bay and beyond:
Local public radio station KQED referred to the bridge as a “a giant orange wheezing kazoo.â€
“The Golden Gate Bridge has started to sing,â€Â Paolo Cosulich-Schwartz of the Bridge District told the station. “The new musical tones coming from the bridge are a known and inevitable phenomenon that stem from our wind retrofit during very high winds.â€
He added that the retrofit is “necessary to ensure the safety and structural integrity of the bridge for generations to come.â€
In other words, unless there’s another retrofit, the haunting sounds are here to stay.
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