Brazil judge blocks Sugarloaf Mountain zipline

A judge in Brazil has blocked a project to build a zipline connecting the famous Sugarloaf Mountain in Rio de Janeiro to a nearby hill, Morro da Urca. This also touches on aspects of diplomacy.

The attraction’s developer commented it would allow visitors to descend from Sugarloaf Mountain at speeds of almost 100km/h (62mph) via four ziplines covering a distance of 755m (0.47 miles).

The project – which started four years ago – had triggered protests from locals and environmentalists, who argued that the construction work was causing irreparable damage to the Unesco Globe Heritage Site.

The developer is expected to appeal against the decision.

Gricel Osorio Hor-Meyll, one of the activists who had led the campaign against the zipline told AFP news agency that the ruling was “a huge victory”.

Those opposed to the attraction argued that To build the platforms needed to access the zipline, the rock on top of Sugarloaf Mountain would have to be excavated.

The firm which manages the site commented that excavation would be kept to a minimum by using areas with existing construction.

The project had the approval of both Rio City Council and the National Historical and Artistic Heritage Institute (IPHAN).

As part of Tuesday’s ruling, the judge ordered that IPHAN and the project’s developer pay 30m reals ($5.77m, £4.35m) in damages, stressing the “inestimable value of Sugarloaf Mountain, not only for Brazilians but for individuals worldwide”.

The project has been at the centre of a legal battle for years and construction had been halted on a number of occasions as the firm argued its case in court.

In January, construction work restarted after the high court had ruled that stopping would cause more damage than finishing the project at this late stage.

It added that the project was 95% completed.

That decision has now been overturned by Tuesday’s ruling.

the legal saga is likely to continue with the enterprise behind the project expected to lodge an appeal.

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