MOSE System Uses 78 Giant Submarine Barriers to Protect Venice from Extreme Tides and the Permanent Advance of Sea Level.
Venice has always lived in unstable balance with water. Built on stilts driven into the lagoon’s bottom, the city depended for centuries on predictable tides and relatively stable Adriatic levels. This balance began to crumble in the 20th century, when the combination of gradual land subsidence and sea level rise started to cause increasingly frequent and destructive flooding. The Italian response was one of the most complex coastal engineering projects ever attempted in Europe: MOSE.
The Threat That Turned Water into a Permanent Enemy
The phenomenon known as acqua alta ceased to be an occasional event and started to occur dozens of times a year. In extreme tides, large areas of Venice would become submerged, affecting residents, commerce, historical heritage, and the very structure of the buildings.
Some squares recorded flooding levels exceeding one meter, putting churches, palaces, and centuries-old foundations at risk.
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Faced with the prospect of making the city uninhabitable throughout the 21st century, Italy decided not to raise all of Venice but rather to physically control the entry of the sea.
A Monumental Scale Submarine System
MOSE — short for Experimental Electromechanical Module — consists of 78 movable metal barriers, installed on the seabed at three strategic points connecting the Venice Lagoon to the Adriatic Sea.
Each barrier operates independently and weighs up to 300 tons, with dimensions comparable to that of a multi-story building when raised.
These structures are normally filled with water and lie on the seabed. When the tide reaches critical levels, the system injects compressed air into the barriers, forcing out the water and causing them to rotate and rise, forming a continuous barrier between the open sea and the lagoon.
Engineering Designed Not to Interfere with the City
One of the biggest technical challenges was creating a system capable of operating without permanently altering the natural tide regime. MOSE only operates during extreme events, remaining submerged for most of the time.
The barriers were designed to withstand marine corrosion, water pressure, and repeated cycles of opening and closing. The entire system relies on subterranean infrastructure, including service tunnels, pump houses, and control centers, invisible to those observing the city.
Billion-Dollar Costs and Decades of Construction
The complexity came at a high price. MOSE took more than 20 years from design to construction and testing, with a final estimated cost of billion euros. The project faced delays, technical revisions, scope changes, and even political scandals related to funding.

Despite this, the system went into experimental operation and began to be activated during episodes of exceptional tides, preventing flooding that, in similar past situations, would have inundated much of Venice.
A Mobile Shield Against the Advance of the Sea
When activated, MOSE can completely isolate the lagoon for hours, keeping the internal water level controlled even during storms and high winds. This protects not only historical heritage but also the modern infrastructure of the city, such as electrical systems, sewage networks, and transportation.
Unlike fixed dikes, the system does not permanently block water circulation, reducing ongoing environmental impacts and preserving the lagoon’s natural dynamics most of the time.
Even being one of the largest coastal engineering works ever built, MOSE is not a definitive solution forever. The continuous rise of sea level may require more frequent activations, increasing operation and maintenance costs.
Moreover, the barriers need constant inspections, cleaning against marine fouling, and structural reviews to ensure safe operation over the coming decades.
When Engineering Becomes the Last Line of Defense
MOSE represents a radical shift in how historic cities deal with natural threats. Instead of slowly adapting urban occupation, Venice began to rely on a submarine mechanical shield, operated on demand, to ensure its survival.
More than a containment work, the project symbolizes the point where engineering, historical heritage, and climate change intersect.
In Venice, protecting the past required building one of the most technically advanced infrastructures of the present and keeping 78 giants of steel ready to rise whenever the sea tries to reclaim the city.



Asombroso, una prueba más del ingenio humano, felicitaciones a sus creadores, constructores, y al pueblo de Venecia por su esfuerzo